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  • Today in History

    December 26

    1776 After crossing the Delaware River into New Jersey, George Washington leads an attack on Hessian mercenaries at Trenton, and takes 900 men prisoner.
    1786 Daniel Shay leads a rebellion in Massachusetts to protest the seizure of property for the non-payment of debt.
    1806 Napoleon's army is checked by the Russians at the Battle of Pultusk.
    1862 38 Santee Sioux are hanged in Mankato, Minnesota for their part in the Sioux Uprising in Minnesota. Little Crow has fled the state.
    1866 Brig. Gen. Philip St. George Cooke, head of the Department of the Platte, receives word of the Fetterman Fight in Powder River County in the Dakota territory.
    1917 As a wartime measure, President Woodrow Wilson places railroads under government control, with Secretary of War William McAdoo as director general.
    1925 Six U.S. destroyers are ordered from Manila to China to protect interests in the civil war that is being waged there.
    1932 Over 70,000 people are killed in a massive earthquake in China.
    1941 General Douglas MacArthur declares Manila an open city in the face of the onrushing Japanese Army.
    1943 The German battleship Scharnhorst is sunk by British ships in an Arctic fight.
    1944 Advancing Soviet troops complete their encirclement of Budapest in Hungary.
    1945 The United States, Soviet Union and Great Britain, end a 10-day meeting, seeking an atomic rule by the UN Council.
    1953 The United States announces the withdrawal of two divisions from Korea.
    1962 Eight East Berliners escape to West Berlin, crashing through gates in an armor-plated bus.
    1966 Dr. Maulana Karenga celebrates the first Kwanza, a seven-day African-American celebration of family and heritage.
    1979 The Soviet Union flies 5,000 troops to intervene in the Afghanistan conflict.
    1982 Time magazine chooses a personal computer as it "Man of the Year," the first non-human ever to receive th honor.
    1991 The Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union formally dissolves the Soviet Union.
    1996 JonBenet Ramsey, a six-year-old beauty queen, is found beaten and strangled to death in the basement of her family's home in Boulder, Colorado, one of the most high-profile crimes of the late 20th century in the US.
    1996 Workers in South Korea's automotive and shipbuilding industries begin the largest labor strike in that country's history, protesting a new law that made firing employees easier and would curtail the rights of labor groups to organize.
    1999 Lothar, a violent, 36-hour windstorm begins; it kills 137 and causes $1.3 billion (US dollars) damage in Central Europe.
    2004 A tsunami caused by a 9.3-magnitude earthquake kills more than 230,000 along the rim of the Indian Ocean.
    2006 Former U.S. President Gerald R. Ford dies at age 93. Ford was the only unelected president in America's history.

    Born on December 26

    1716 Thomas Gray, English poet.
    1792 Charles Babbage, English mathematician who perfected the calculating machine.
    1891 Henry Miller, American writer.
    1893 Mao Tse-tung, founding father of the People's Republic of China.
    1894 Jean Toomer, poet and novelist who figured prominently in the Harlem Renaissance (Cane).
    1905 William Loeb III, publisher of the Manchester Union Leader (later The New Hampshire Union Leader), one of the best-known small town newspapers in the US.
    1907 Albert Gore Sr., US Senator from Tennessee who was instrumental in sponsoring and pushing through legislation that created America's Interstate Highway System.
    1914 Richard Widmark, actor (Kiss of Death); member of Western Performers Hall of Fame.
    1921 Steve Allen, radio and TV personality, actor, musician, comedian, writer; hosted The Steve Allen Show and I've Got a Secret; won a Grammy for his jazz composition "The Gravy Waltz" (1963).
    1924 Frank Broyles, college football player and coach; member of College Football Hall of Fame.
    1927 Alan King, comedian, actor, producer, author (How to Pick Up Girls, Night and the CIty).
    1939 Phil Spector, record producer; creator of the "Wall of Sound" production method; convicted in 2009 of murdering actress Lana Clarkson, he was sentenced to 19 years to life in prison.
    1942 Dan Massey, social activist, author; co-founder and CEO of VenusPlusX.
    1945 TV personality, victims rights advocate; created of America's Most Wanted TV series after the murder of his son Adam in 1981.
    1947 USMC General James T. Conway, commandant of the Marine Corps (2006-10); commanded 1st Marine Expeditionary Force during the Second Gulf War.
    2000 Samuel Sevian, chess prodigy; at age 12 became youngest-ever United States International Master.
    What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
    Faust

    Comment


    • Today in History
      December 27

      1512 The laws of Burgos give New World natives legal protection against abuse and authorize Negro slavery.
      1831 HMS Beagle, with Charles Darwin on board, departs from Plymouth. It will eventually visit the Galapagos Islands where Darwin will form his theories on evolution.
      1862 Union General William Rosecrans' army begins moving slowly toward Murfreesboro, Tennessee, from Nashville.
      1913 Charles Moyer, president of the Miners Union, is shot in the back and dragged through the streets of Chicago.
      1915 In Ohio, iron and steel workers go on strike for an eight-hour day and higher wages.
      1932 Radio City Music Hall opens.
      1933 Josef Stalin calls tensions with Japan a grave danger.
      1939 A series of vicious earthquakes take 11,000 lives in Turkey.
      1941 Japanese bombers attack Manila, despite its claim as an open city.
      1944 General George S. Patton's Third Army, spearheaded by the 4th Armored Division, relieves the surrounded city of Bastogne in Belgium.
      1945 The International Monetary Fund and the Bank for Reconstruction and Development are created.
      1947 The new Italian constitution is promulgated in Rome.
      1950 The United States and Spain resume relations for the first time since the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s.
      1956 Segregation on buses in Tallahassee, Florida, is outlawed.
      1968 The United States agrees to sell F-4 Phantom jets to Israel.
      1979 President Hafizullah Amin of Afghanistan is ousted and murdered in a coup backed by the Soviet Union, beginning a war that will last more than 10 years.
      1983 President Reagan takes all responsibility for the lack of security in Beirut that allowed a terrorist on a suicide mission to kill 241 Marines.
      1984 Four Polish officers are tried for the slaying of Reverend Jerzy Popieluszko.
      1985 Palestinian guerrillas kill 18 people at airports in Rome and Vienna.
      1996 Taliban forces retake strategic Bagram Airfield during Afghan civil war.
      2001 China receives permanent normal trade relations with the US.
      2004 Radiation reaches Earth from the brightest extrasolar event ever witnessed, an explosion of magnetar SGR 1806-20.
      2007 Former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto assassinated.
      2007 After Mwai Kibaki is declared the winner of Kenya's presidential elections, rioting begins in Mombasa, precipitating an economic, humanitarian and political crisis.

      Born on December 27

      1571 Johannes Kepler, German astronomer and mathematician.
      1822 Louis Pasteur, French chemist and microbiologist.
      1829 Hinton Helper, southern abolitionist who wrote The Impending Crisis.
      1901 Marlene Dietrich, German-born singer and actress.
      1919 Major General Charles Sweeney, the pilot of Bocks Car, the B-29 that dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan.
      1943 Cokie Roberts, American broadcast journalist.
      1948 Gerard Depardieu, one of the most prolific character actors in film history; won two Cesar awards from France's Academie des arts et techniques du cinema and a Golden Globe (Green Card, Cyrano de Bergerac).
      1962 Bill Self, college men's basketball coach; named the National Coach of the Year in 2000, 2009 and 2011 by The Sporting News and Associated Press National Coach of the Year 2009.
      1971 Savannah Guthrie, journalist; co-host of NBC's The Today Show.
      1975 Heather O'Rourke, child actress discovered at age 5 by Stephen Spielberg; she died at age 12 (Poltergeist film series).
      What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
      Faust

      Comment


      • Today in History

        January 6

        1066 Harold Godwineson is crowned crowned King Harold II – King of England.
        1540 Henry VIII of England marries his fourth wife, Anne of Cleves. The marriage will last six months.
        1861 The Governor of Maryland, Thomas Hicks, announces his opposition to the states's possible secession from the Union.
        1904 Japanese railway authorities in Korea refuse to transport Russian troops.
        1910 Union leaders ask President William H. Taft to investigate U.S. Steel's practices.
        1912 New Mexico becomes the 47th U.S. state of the Union.
        1918 Germany acknowledges Finland's independence.
        1919 Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th president of the United States, dies at the age of 60 in his home at Sagamore Hill, New York.
        1921 The U.S. Navy orders the sale of 125 flying boats to encourage commercial aviation.
        1937 The United States bans the shipment of arms to war-torn Spain.
        1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt asks Congress to support the Lend-lease Bill to help supply the Allies.
        1945 Boeing B-29 bombers in the Pacific strike new blows on Tokyo and Nanking.
        1946 Ho Chi Minh wins in the Vietnamese elections.
        1958 Moscow announces a reduction in its armed forces by 300,000.
        1967 Over 16,000 U.S. and 14,000 Vietnamese troops start their biggest attack on the Iron Triangle, northwest of Saigon.
        1987 Astronomers report sighting a new galaxy 12 billion light years away.
        2001 In one of the closest Presidential elections in U.S. history, George W. Bush was finally declared the winner of the bitterly contested 2000 Presidential elections more then five weeks after the election due to the disputed Florida ballots.
        2005 Former Ku Klux Klan organizer Edgar Ray Killen arrested as a suspect in the 1964 murders of three civil rights workers in Mississippi.

        Born on January 6

        1367 Richard II, son of Edward the Black Prince.
        1412 Joan of Arc, French Saint and national heroine.
        1811 Charles Sumner, anti-slavery senator from Massachusetts.
        1878 Carl Sandburg, U.S. journalist, poet and biographer.
        1882 Sam Rayburn, U.S. Congressman from Texas & Speaker of the House (1940-46, 1949-53).
        1899 Heinz Nordhoff, German engineer, named managing director of the Volkswagen plant at Wolfsburg after World War II; under his leadership the Volkswagen Beetle became a worldwide phenomenon.
        1900 Maria of Romania, Queen of Yugoslavia; wife of King Alexander.
        1912 Danny Thomas, actor, producer, philanthropist; founder of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
        1913 Loretta Young, actress; won Academy Award for The Farmer's Daughter (1947).
        1924 Earl Scruggs, musician; popularized the finger-picking style of banjo playing; blended rock and bluegrass.
        1935 Queen Margarita of Bulgaria (Dona Margarita Gomez-Acebo y Cejuela).
        1937 Lou Holtz, college football coach; television sports commentator.
        1944 Bonnie Franklin, actress (One Day at a Time TV series).
        1946 Syd Barrett, musician, singer, songwriter; founding member of the band Pink Floyd.
        1957 Nancy Lopez, pro golfer; won LPGA Championship (1978, 1985) and Mazda LPGA Championship (1989).
        What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
        Faust

        Comment


        • Today in History
          January 7

          1327 King Edward II of England is deposed.
          1558 The French, under the Duke of Guise, finally take the port of Calais from the English.
          1785 Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard and American Dr. John Jeffries make the first crossing of the English Channel in a hydrogen balloon.
          1807 Responding to Napoleon Bonaparte's attempted blockade of the British Isles, the British blockade Continental Europe.
          1865 Cheyenne and Sioux warriors attack Julesburg, Colo., in retaliation for the Sand Creek Massacre.
          1901 New York stock exchange trading exceeds two million shares for the first time in history.
          1902 Imperial Court of China returns to Peking. The Empress Dowager resumes her reign.
          1918 The Germans move 75,000 troops from the Eastern Front to the Western Front.
          1934 Six thousand pastors in Berlin defy the Nazis insisting that they will not be silenced.
          1944 The U.S. Air Force announces the production of the first jet-fighter, Bell P-59 Airacomet.
          1945 U.S. air ace Major Thomas B. McGuire, Jr. is killed in the Pacific.
          1952 French forces in Indochina launch Operation Violette in an effort to push Viet Minh forces away from the town of Ba Vi.
          1955 Marian Anderson becomes the first African American to sing at the Metropolitan Opera House.
          1975 Vietnamese troops take Phuoc Binh in new full-scale offensive.
          1979 Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge are overthrown when Vietnamese troops seize the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh.
          1980 US President Jimmy Carter signs legislation providing $1.5 billion in loans to salvage Chrysler Corporation.
          1985 Vietnam seizes the Khmer National Liberation Front headquarters near the Thai border.
          1985 Japan launches its first interplanetary spacecraft, Sakigake, the first deep space probe launched by any nation other than the US or the USSR.
          1989 Prince Akihito sworn in as Emperor of Japan, following the death of his father, Hirohito.
          1990 Safety concerns over structural problems force the Leaning Tower of Pisa to be closed to the public.
          1993 The Bosnian Army carries out a surprise attack on the village of Kravica in Srebrenica during the Bosnian War.
          1999 The impeachment trial of US President Bill Clinton opens in the US Senate.

          Born on January 7

          1718 Israel Putnam, American Revolutionary War hero.
          1745 Etienne Montgolfier, French inventor who, with his brother, launched the first successful hot-air balloon.
          1800 Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States.
          1845 Louis III, last King of Bavaria.
          1911 Butterfly McQueen (Thelma McQueen), actress best known for her role as Scarlett O'Hara's maid Prissy in Gone with the Wind (1939); won Daytime Emmy portraying Aunt Thelma, a fairy godmother in "The Seven Wishes of Joanna Peabody," an ABC Afterschool Special.
          1912 Charles Addams, cartoonist, creator of the Addams Family.
          1922 Jean-Pierre Rampal, flautist.
          1930 Jack Greene, country singer, musician; won Country Music Association Male Vocalist of the Year, Single of the Year, Album of the Year and Song of the Year for "There Goes My Everything" (1967).
          1939 Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark.
          1948 Kenny Loggins, singer, songwriter; half of Loggins and Messina duo.
          1957 Katie Couric, journalist, author; has hosted news and talk shows on all three major TV networks.
          What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
          Faust

          Comment


          • Today in History
            January 8

            1681 The Treaty of Radzin ends a five year war between the Turks and the allied countries of Russia and Poland.
            1745 England, Austria, Saxony and the Netherlands form an alliance against Russia.
            1815 A rag-tag army under Andrew Jackson defeats the British on the fields of Chalmette in the Battle of New Orleans.
            1871 Prussian troops begin to bombard Paris during the Franco-Prussian War.
            1892 A coal mine explosion kills 100 in McAlister, Oklahoma.
            1900 The Boers attack the British in Ladysmith, South Africa, but are turned back.
            1908 A subway line opens linking the New York boroughs of Brooklyn and Manhattan.
            1940 Great Britain begins rationing sugar, meat and butter.
            1946 President Harry S. Truman vows to stand by the Yalta accord on self-determination for the Balkans.
            1954 President Dwight Eisenhower proposes stripping convicted Communists of their U.S. citizenship.
            1963 President John F. Kennedy attends the unveiling of the Mona Lisa.
            1975 Ella T. Grasso becomes Governor of Connecticut, the first female governor in the US who did not come into office by succeeding her husband.
            1979 The United States advises the Shah to leave Iran.
            1982 AT&T agrees to divest 22 subdivisions as part of an antitrust agreement.
            1994 Valeri Polyakov, a Russian cosmonaut leaves earth, bound for the Mir space station; he will spend a record 437 days in space.
            2002 US President George W. Bush signs into law the No Child Left Behind Act, intended to improve America's educational system.
            2004 The largest passenger ship in history, the RMS Queen Mary 2, is christened by Queen Elizabeth II, granddaughter of Queen Mary.
            2011 An attempted assassination of Arizona Representative Gabrielle Giffords is part of a shooting spree in which Jared Lee Loughner kills 6 and wounds 13.

            Born on January 8

            1587 Johannes Fabricus, astronomer who discovered sunspots.
            1786 Nicholas Biddle, head of the first United States bank.
            1862 Frank Nelson Doubleday, founder of Doubleday publishing house.
            1935 Elvis Presley, rock 'n roll singer, actor in over thirty films.
            1938 Bob Eubanks, popular US TV game show host (The Newlywed Game).
            1941 Graham Chapman, comedian, actor, member of Monty Python group.
            1947 David Bowie, singer, songwriter, producer, actor ("Starman").
            2011 Princess Josephine of Denmark, Countess of Monpezat (Josephine Sophia Ivalo Mathilda), and Prince Vincent of Denmark, Count of Monpezat (Vincent Frederik Minik Alexander).
            What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
            Faust

            Comment


            • Today in History
              January 13

              1397 John of Gaunt marries Katherine Rouet.
              1846 President James Polk dispatches General Zachary Taylor and 4,000 troops to the Texas Border as war with Mexico looms.
              1862 President Lincoln names Edwin M. Stanton Secretary of War.
              1900 To combat Czech nationalism, Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary decrees German the official language of the Imperial Army.
              1919 California votes to ratify the prohibition amendment.
              1923 Hitler denounces the Weimar Republic as 5,000 storm troopers demonstrate in Germany.
              1927 A woman takes a seat on the NY Stock Exchange breaking the all-male tradition.
              1931 The bridge connecting New York and New Jersey is named the George Washington Memorial Bridge.
              1937 The United States bars Americans from serving in the Civil War in Spain.
              1943 General Leclerc's Free French forces merge with the British under Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery in Libya.
              1944 Plants are destroyed and 64 U.S. aircraft are lost in an air attack in Germany.
              1945 The Red Army opens an offensive in South Poland, crashing 25 miles through the German lines.
              1947 British troops replace striking truck drivers.
              1955 Chase National and the Bank of Manhattan agree to merge resulting in the second largest U.S. bank.
              1965 Two U.S. planes are shot down in Laos while on a combat mission.
              1968 U.S. reports shifting most air targets from North Vietnam to Laos.
              1976 Argentina ousts a British envoy in dispute over the Falkland Islands.
              1980 The United States offers Pakistan a two-year aid plan to counter the Soviet threat in Afghanistan.
              1982 Air Florida Flight 90 Boeing 737 jet crashes into Washington, D.C.'s 14th Street Bridge shortly after takeoff, then plunges into the Potomac River; 78 people, including 4 motorists, are killed.
              1990 In Virginia, Douglas Wilder, the first African American elected governor of a US state, takes office.

              Born on January 13

              1808 Salmon P. Chase, U.S. Treasury Secretary, sixth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
              1832 Horatio Alger, Jr., American children's author (Ragged Dick, Tattered Tom).
              1919 Robert Stack, actor; portrayed Elliot Ness in TV series The Untouchables.
              1926 Michael Bond, author, best known for his series of Paddington Bear children's books.
              1929 Joe Pass, considered one of the greatest jazz guitarists of the 20th century.
              1961 Julia Louis-Dreyfus, actress, producer (Seinfeld TV series)
              What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
              Faust

              Comment


              • Today in History
                January 14

                1236 Henry III marries Eleanor of Provence.
                1526 Francis of France, held captive by Charles V for a year, signs the Treaty of Madrid, giving up most of his claims in France and Italy.
                1797 Napoleon Bonaparte defeats Austrians at Rivoli in northern Italy.
                1858 Emperor Napoleon and Empress Eugenie escape unhurt after an Italian assassin throws a bomb at their carriage as they travel to the Paris Opera.
                1864 Confederate President Jefferson Davis writes to General Joseph E. Johnson, observing that troops may need to be sent to Alabama or Mississippi.
                1911 The USS Arkansas, the largest U.S. battleship, is launched from the yards of the New York Shipbuilding Company.
                1915 The French abandon five miles of trenches to the Germans near Soissons.
                1916 British authorities seize German attaché Franz von Papen's financial records confirming espionage activities in the U.S.
                1917 A Provisional Parliament is established in Poland.
                1920 Berlin is placed under martial law as 40,000 radicals rush the Reichstag; 42 are dead and 105 are wounded.
                1942 President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders all aliens in the U.S. to register with the government.
                1943 Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Charles DeGaulle meet at Casablanca to discuss the direction of the war.
                1943 Italian occupation authorities refuse to deport Jews living in their territories in France.
                1969 A blast on the U.S. carrier Enterprise in the Pacific results in 24 dead and 85 injured.
                1980 The United Nations votes 104-18 to deplore the Soviet aggression in Afghanistan.
                2000 UN tribunal sentences 5 Bosnian Croats to prison for up to 25 years; they were charged with killing some 100 Muslims in a Bosnian village in 1993.
                2004 The Republic of Georgia restores the "five cross flag" as its national flag after some 500 years of disuse.
                2005 Huygens probe lands on Saturn's moon Titan.
                2010 Yemen declares war on al-Qaeda terrorist group.
                2011 Zine El Abinine Ben Ali, former president of Tunisia, flees to Saudi Arabia after a series of demonstrations against his regime.

                Born on January 14

                1730 William Whipple, signatory of Declaration of Independence.
                1741 Benedict Arnold, American colonial General turned traitor.
                1875 Dr. Albert Schweitzer, French theologian who set up a native hospital in French Equatorial Africa in 1913.
                1919 Andy Rooney, American humorist, author and television personality (60 Minutes).
                1940 Julian Bond, civil rights leader and Georgia state senator.
                1944 Nina Totenberg, journalist; legal affairs correspondent for National Public Radio.
                1947 Taylor Branch, author, historian; best known for his America in the King Years trilogy chronicling the life of Martin Luther King Jr.
                1948 T Bone Burnett (Joseph Henry Burnett), musician, songwriter, Grammy-winning producer (O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack).
                1952 Maureen Dowd, New York Times columnist, author; won Pulitzer Prize for her series on the Monica Lewinsky scandal during the Clinton administration.
                1968 LL Cool J (James Todd Smith), influential rapper ("I'm Bad"); actor (NCIS: Los Angeles TV series).
                What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                Faust

                Comment


                • Today in History
                  January 15

                  1624 Riots flare in Mexico when it is announced that all churches are to be closed.
                  1811 In a secret session, Congress plans to annex Spanish East Florida.
                  1865 Union troops capture Fort Fisher, North Carolina.
                  1913 The first telephone line between Berlin and New York is inaugurated.
                  1919 Peasants in Central Russia rise against the Bolsheviks.
                  1920 The Dry Law goes into effect in the United States. Selling liquor and beer becomes illegal.
                  1920 The United States approves a $150 million loan to Poland, Austria and Armenia to aid in their war with the Russian communists.
                  1927 The Dumbarton Bridge opens in San Francisco carrying the first auto traffic across the bay.
                  1929 The U.S. Senate ratifies the Kellogg-Briand anti-war pact.
                  1930 Amelia Earhart sets an aviation record for women at 171 mph in a Lockheed Vega.
                  1936 In London, Japan quits all naval disarmament talks after being denied equality.
                  1944 The U.S. Fifth Army successfully breaks the German Winter Line in Italy with the capture of Mount Trocchio.
                  1949 Chinese Communists occupy Tientsin after a 27-hour battle with Nationalist forces.
                  1965 Sir Winston Churchill suffers a severe stroke.
                  1967 Some 462 Yale faculty members call for an end to the bombing in North Vietnam.
                  1973 US President Richard Nixon announces the suspension of offensive action by US troops in Vietnam.
                  1973 Four of six remaining Watergate defendants plead guilty.
                  1975 The Alvor Agreement is signed, ending the Angolan War of independence and granting that country independence from Portugal.
                  1976 Sara Jane Moore sentenced to life in prison for her failed attempt to assassinate US President Gerald Ford.
                  1991 UN deadline for Iraq to withdraw its forces from occupied Kuwait passes, setting the stage for Operation Desert Storm.
                  1991 Britain's Queen Elizabeth II approves Australia instituting its own Victoria Cross honors system, the first county in the British Commonwealth permitted to do so.
                  1992 Slovenia and Croatia's independence from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is recognized by the international community.
                  2001 Wikipedia goes online.

                  Born on January 15

                  1622 Moliere [Jean Baptiste Poquelin], French comic dramatist best remembered for his play La Tartuffe.
                  1716 Philip Livingston, signatory to the Declaration of Independence.
                  1823 Mathew Brady, Civil War photographer.
                  1906 Aristotle Onassis, Greek tycoon.
                  1908 Edward Teller, Hungarian-born U.S. physicist known as the "Father of the H-bomb."
                  1929 Martin Luther King, Jr., civil rights leader and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.
                  1945 Princess Michael of Kent (Baroness Marie Christine Anna Agnes Hedwig Ida von Reibnitz), married to Prince Michael of Kent, grandson of Britain's King George V.
                  1948 Ronnie Van Zant, singer, songwriter; founding member of Lynyrd Skynyrd band.
                  1982 Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia.
                  What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                  Faust

                  Comment


                  • Today in History
                    January 16

                    1547 Ivan IV crowns himself the new Czar of Russia in Assumption Cathedral in Moscow.
                    1786 The Council of Virginia guarantees religious freedom.
                    1847 John C. Fremont, the famed "Pathfinder" of Western exploration, is appointed governor of California.
                    1865 General William T. Sherman begins a march through the Carolinas.
                    1900 The U.S. Senate recognizes the Anglo-German Treaty of 1899 by which the UK renounced its rights to the Samoan Islands.
                    1909 One of Ernest Shackleton's polar exploration teams reaches the Magnetic South Pole.
                    1914 Maxim Gorky is authorized to return to Russia after an eight year exile for political dissidence.
                    1920 The League of Nations holds its first meeting in Paris.
                    1920 Allies lift the blockade on trade with Russia.
                    1939 Franklin D. Roosevelt asks for an extension of the Social Security Act to include more women and children.
                    1940 Hitler cancels an attack in the West due to bad weather and the capture of German attack plans in Belgium.
                    1942 Japan's advance into Burma begins.
                    1944 Eisenhower assumes supreme command of the Allied Expeditionary Force in Europe.
                    1945 The U.S. First and Third armies link up at Houffalize, effectively ending the Battle of the Bulge.
                    1956 The Egyptian government makes Islam the state religion.
                    1965 Eighteen are arrested in Mississippi for the murder of three civil rights workers.
                    1975 The Irish Republican Army calls an end to a 25-day cease fire in Belfast.
                    1979 The Shah leaves Iran.
                    1991 The Persian Gulf War begins. The massive U.S.-led offensive against Iraq — Operation Desert Storm — ended on February 28, 1991, when President George Bush declared a cease-fire, and Iraq pledged to honor future coalition and U.N. peace terms.
                    Born on January 16
                    1757 Samuel McIntire, architect of Salem, Massachusetts.
                    1749 Vittorio Alfieri, Italian tragic poet (Cleopatra, Parigi shastigliata).
                    1821 John C. Breckinridge, 14th U.S. Vice President, Confederate Secretary of War.
                    1909 Ethel Merman, U.S. singer and actress, the "Queen of Broadway."
                    What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                    Faust

                    Comment


                    • January 17




                      1377 - The Papal See was transferred from Avignon in France back to Rome.

                      1562 - French Protestants were recognized under the Edict of St. Germain.

                      1773 - Captain Cook's Resolution became the first ship to cross the Antarctic Circle.

                      1795 - The Dudingston Curling Society was organized in Edinburgh, Scotland.

                      1806 - James Madison Randolph, grandson of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, was the first child born in the White House.

                      1852 - The independence of the Transvaal Boers was recognized by Britain.

                      1871 - Andrew S. Hallidie received a patent for a cable car system.

                      1882 - Thomas Edison's exhibit opened the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London.

                      1893 - Hawaii's monarchy was overthrown when a group of businessmen and sugar planters forced Queen Liliuokalani to abdicate.

                      1900 - The U.S. took Wake Island where there was in important cable link between Hawaii and Manila.

                      1900 - Yaqui Indians in Texas proclaimed their independence from Mexico.

                      1900 - Mormon Brigham Roberts was denied a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives for his practicing of polygamy.

                      1905 - Punchboards were patented by a manufacturing firm in Chicago, IL.

                      1912 - English explorer Robert Falcon Scott reached the South Pole. Norwegian Roald Amundsen had beaten him there by one month. Scott and his party died during the return trip.

                      1913 - All partner interests in 36 Golden Rule Stores were consolidated and incorporated in Utah into one company. The new corporation was the J.C. Penney Company.

                      1916 - The Professional Golfers Association was formed in New York City.

                      1928 - The fully automatic, film-developing machine was patented by A.M. Josepho.

                      1934 - Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design for a people's car, a "Volkswagen," to the new German Reich government.

                      1938 - "Stepmother" debuted on CBS radio.

                      1945 - Soviet and Polish forces liberated Warsaw during World War II.

                      1945 - Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg disappeared in Hungary while in Soviet custody. Wallenberg was credited with saving tens of thousands of Jews.

                      1946 - The United Nations Security Council held its first meeting.

                      1949 - "The Goldbergs" debuted on CBS-TV. The program had been on radio since 1931. The TV version lasted for four years.

                      1959 - Senegal and the French Sudan joined to form the Federal State of Mali.

                      1961 - In his farewell address, U.S. President Eisenhower warned against the rise of "the military-industrial complex."

                      1966 - A B-52 carrying four H-bombs collided with a refuelling tanker. The bombs were released and eight crewmembers were killed.

                      1977 - Double murderer Gary Gilmore became the first to be executed in the U.S. in a decade. The firing squad took place at Utah State Prison.

                      1985 - Leonard Nimoy got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

                      1991 - Coalition airstrikes began against Iraq after negotiations failed to get Iraq to retreat from the country of Kuwait.

                      1992 - An IRA bomb, placed next to a remote country road in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, killed seven building workers and injured seven others.

                      1994 - The Northridge earthquake rocked Los Angeles, CA, registering a 6.7 on the Richter Scale. At least 61 people were killed and about $20 billion in damage was caused.

                      1995 - More than 6,000 people were killed when an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 devastated the city of Kobe, Japan.

                      1997 - A court in Ireland granted the first divorce in the Roman Catholic country's history.

                      1997 - Israel gave over 80% of Hebron to Palestinian rule, but held the remainder where several hundred Jewish settlers lived among 20,000 Palestinians.

                      1998 - U.S. President Clinton gave his deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit against him. He was the first U.S. President to testify as a defendant in a criminal or civil lawsuit.

                      2000 - British pharmaceutical companies Glaxo Wellcome PLC and SmithKline Beecham PLC agreed to a merger that created the world's largest drugmaker.

                      2001 - Congo's President Laurent Kabila was shot and killed during a coup attempt. Congolese officials temporarily placed Kabila's son in charge of the government.

                      2001 - The director of Palestinian TV, Hisham Miki, was killed at a restaurant when three masked gunmen walked up to his table and shot him more than 10 times.

                      2002 - It was announced that Microsoft had signed a joint venture agreement to produce software with two partners in China. The two partners were Beijin Centergate Technologies (Holding) Co. and the Stone Group.

                      Birthdays

                      Benjamin Franklin 1706
                      Anton Chekhov 1860
                      David Lloyd George (Britain) 1863
                      Carl Laemmle 1867
                      Noah Beery 1883
                      Mack Sennet 1884
                      Marjorie Gateson 1891
                      Al Capone 1899
                      Nevil Shute 1899
                      Vido Musso 1913
                      George Handy 1920
                      Betty White 1922
                      Moira Shearer 1926
                      Eartha Kitt 1927
                      Vidal Sassoon 1928
                      Jacques Plante 1929
                      James Earl Jones 1931
                      Sheree North 1933
                      Shari Lewis (Hurwitz) 1934
                      Troy Donahue 1937
                      Maury Povich 1939
                      Muhammad Ali 1942
                      Chris Montez 1944
                      William Hart (Delfonics) 1945
                      Mick Taylor (Rolling Stones) 1948 - Rolling Stones Apparel and Gear
                      Andy Kaufman 1949
                      Steve Earle 1955
                      Paul Young 1956
                      David Caruso 1956
                      Steve Harvey 1957
                      Susanna Hoffs (Bangles) 1957
                      John Crawford (Berlin) 1960
                      Jim Carrey 1962
                      Shabba Ranks 1966
                      Naveen Andrews 1969 - Actor ("Lost") - Lost Merchandise
                      Kid Rock 1971
                      Ray J 1981
                      Amanda Wilkinson (The Wilkinsons) 1982
                      What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                      Faust

                      Comment


                      • January 17



                        1377 - The Papal See was transferred from Avignon in France back to Rome.

                        1562 - French Protestants were recognized under the Edict of St. Germain.

                        1773 - Captain Cook's Resolution became the first ship to cross the Antarctic Circle.

                        1795 - The Dudingston Curling Society was organized in Edinburgh, Scotland.

                        1806 - James Madison Randolph, grandson of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, was the first child born in the White House.

                        1852 - The independence of the Transvaal Boers was recognized by Britain.

                        1871 - Andrew S. Hallidie received a patent for a cable car system.

                        1882 - Thomas Edison's exhibit opened the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London.

                        1893 - Hawaii's monarchy was overthrown when a group of businessmen and sugar planters forced Queen Liliuokalani to abdicate.

                        1900 - The U.S. took Wake Island where there was in important cable link between Hawaii and Manila.

                        1900 - Yaqui Indians in Texas proclaimed their independence from Mexico.

                        1900 - Mormon Brigham Roberts was denied a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives for his practicing of polygamy.

                        1905 - Punchboards were patented by a manufacturing firm in Chicago, IL.

                        1912 - English explorer Robert Falcon Scott reached the South Pole. Norwegian Roald Amundsen had beaten him there by one month. Scott and his party died during the return trip.

                        1913 - All partner interests in 36 Golden Rule Stores were consolidated and incorporated in Utah into one company. The new corporation was the J.C. Penney Company.

                        1916 - The Professional Golfers Association was formed in New York City.

                        1928 - The fully automatic, film-developing machine was patented by A.M. Josepho.

                        1934 - Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design for a people's car, a "Volkswagen," to the new German Reich government.

                        1938 - "Stepmother" debuted on CBS radio.

                        1945 - Soviet and Polish forces liberated Warsaw during World War II.

                        1945 - Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg disappeared in Hungary while in Soviet custody. Wallenberg was credited with saving tens of thousands of Jews.

                        1946 - The United Nations Security Council held its first meeting.

                        1949 - "The Goldbergs" debuted on CBS-TV. The program had been on radio since 1931. The TV version lasted for four years.

                        1959 - Senegal and the French Sudan joined to form the Federal State of Mali.

                        1961 - In his farewell address, U.S. President Eisenhower warned against the rise of "the military-industrial complex."

                        1966 - A B-52 carrying four H-bombs collided with a refuelling tanker. The bombs were released and eight crewmembers were killed.

                        1977 - Double murderer Gary Gilmore became the first to be executed in the U.S. in a decade. The firing squad took place at Utah State Prison.

                        1985 - Leonard Nimoy got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

                        1991 - Coalition airstrikes began against Iraq after negotiations failed to get Iraq to retreat from the country of Kuwait.

                        1992 - An IRA bomb, placed next to a remote country road in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, killed seven building workers and injured seven others.

                        1994 - The Northridge earthquake rocked Los Angeles, CA, registering a 6.7 on the Richter Scale. At least 61 people were killed and about $20 billion in damage was caused.

                        1995 - More than 6,000 people were killed when an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 devastated the city of Kobe, Japan.

                        1997 - A court in Ireland granted the first divorce in the Roman Catholic country's history.

                        1997 - Israel gave over 80% of Hebron to Palestinian rule, but held the remainder where several hundred Jewish settlers lived among 20,000 Palestinians.

                        1998 - U.S. President Clinton gave his deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit against him. He was the first U.S. President to testify as a defendant in a criminal or civil lawsuit.

                        2000 - British pharmaceutical companies Glaxo Wellcome PLC and SmithKline Beecham PLC agreed to a merger that created the world's largest drugmaker.

                        2001 - Congo's President Laurent Kabila was shot and killed during a coup attempt. Congolese officials temporarily placed Kabila's son in charge of the government.

                        2001 - The director of Palestinian TV, Hisham Miki, was killed at a restaurant when three masked gunmen walked up to his table and shot him more than 10 times.

                        2002 - It was announced that Microsoft had signed a joint venture agreement to produce software with two partners in China. The two partners were Beijin Centergate Technologies (Holding) Co. and the Stone Group.

                        Birthdays

                        Benjamin Franklin 1706
                        Anton Chekhov 1860
                        David Lloyd George (Britain) 1863
                        Carl Laemmle 1867
                        Noah Beery 1883
                        Mack Sennet 1884
                        Marjorie Gateson 1891
                        Al Capone 1899
                        Nevil Shute 1899
                        Vido Musso 1913
                        George Handy 1920
                        Betty White 1922
                        Moira Shearer 1926
                        Eartha Kitt 1927
                        Vidal Sassoon 1928
                        Jacques Plante 1929
                        James Earl Jones 1931
                        Sheree North 1933
                        Shari Lewis (Hurwitz) 1934
                        Troy Donahue 1937
                        Maury Povich 1939
                        Muhammad Ali 1942
                        Chris Montez 1944
                        William Hart (Delfonics) 1945
                        Mick Taylor (Rolling Stones) 1948 - Rolling Stones Apparel and Gear
                        Andy Kaufman 1949
                        Steve Earle 1955
                        Paul Young 1956
                        David Caruso 1956
                        Steve Harvey 1957
                        Susanna Hoffs (Bangles) 1957
                        John Crawford (Berlin) 1960
                        Jim Carrey 1962
                        Michelle Obama 1964
                        Shabba Ranks 1966
                        Naveen Andrews 1969 - Actor ("Lost") - Lost Merchandise
                        Kid Rock 1971
                        Ray J 1981
                        Amanda Wilkinson (The Wilkinsons) 1982
                        What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                        Faust

                        Comment


                        • January 23


                          Today's: Famous Birthdays - Music history


                          1556 - An earthquake in Shanxi Province, China, was thought to have killed about 830,000 people.

                          1571 - The Royal Exchange in London, founded by financier Thomas Gresham, was opened by Queen Elizabeth I.

                          1789 - Georgetown College was established as the first Catholic college in the U.S. The school is in Washington, DC.

                          1845 - The U.S. Congress decided all national elections would be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.

                          1849 - English-born Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman in America to receive medical degree. It was from the Medical Institution of Geneva, NY.

                          1907 - Charles Curtis, of Kansas, began serving in the United States Senate. He was the first American Indian to become a U.S. Senator. He resigned in March of 1929 to become U.S. President Herbert Hoover’s Vice President.

                          1920 - The Dutch government refused the demands from the Allies to hand over the ex-kaiser of Germany.

                          1924 - The first Labour government was formed, under Ramsay MacDonald.

                          1937 - In Moscow, seventeen people went on trial during Josef Stalin's "Great Purge."

                          1941 - The play, "Lady in the Dark" premiered.

                          1943 - Duke Ellington and the band played for a black-tie crowd at Carnegie Hall in New York City for the first time.

                          1943 - The British captured Tripoli from the Germans.

                          1950 - The Israeli Knesset approved a resolution proclaiming Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

                          1960 - The U.S. Navy bathyscaphe Trieste descended to a record depth of 35,820 feet (10,750 meters) in the Pacific Ocean.

                          1964 - Ratification of the 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was completed. This amendment eliminated the poll tax in federal elections.

                          1968 - North Korea seized the U.S. Navy ship Pueblo, charging it had intruded into the nation's territorial waters on a spying mission. The crew was released 11 months later.

                          1971 - In Prospect Creek Camp, AK, the lowest temperature ever recorded in the U.S. was reported as minus 80 degrees.

                          1973 - U.S. President Nixon announced that an accord had been reached to end the Vietnam War.

                          1974 - Mike Oldfield’s "Tubular Bells" opened the credits of the movie, "The Exorcist".

                          1975 - "Barney Miller" made his debut on ABC-TV.

                          1977 - The TV mini-series "Roots," began airing on ABC. The show was based on the Alex Haley novel.

                          1978 - Sweden banned aerosol sprays because of damage to environment. They were the first country to do so.

                          1983 - "The A-Team" debuted on TV.

                          1985 - O.J. Simpson became the first Heisman Trophy winner to be elected to pro football’s Hall of Fame in Canton, OH.

                          1985 - The proceedings of the House of Lords were televised for the first time.

                          1989 - Surrealist artist Salvador Dali died in Spain at age 84.

                          1997 - A judge in Fairfax, VA, sentenced Mir Aimal Kasi to death for an assault rifle attack outside the CIA headquarters in 1993 that killed two men and wounded three other people.

                          1997 - A British woman received a record £186,000 damages for Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI).

                          2001 - A van used by the remaining two fugitives of the "Texas 7" was recovered in Colorado Springs, CO. A few hours later police surrounded a hotel where the convicts were hiding. Patrick Murphy Jr. and Donald Newbury were taken into custody the next morning without incident.

                          2002 - John Walker Lindh returned to the U.S. under FBI custody. Lindh was charge with conspiring to kill U.S. citizens, providing support to terrorists and engaging in prohibited transactions with the Taliban while a member of the al-Quaida terrorist organization in Afghanistan.

                          2003 - North Korea announced that it would consider sanctions an act of war for North Korea's reinstatement of its nuclear program.

                          Birthdays

                          John Hancock 1737
                          Edouard Manet 1832
                          Joseph Nathan Kane 1899
                          Randolph Scott 1903
                          Dan Duryea 1907
                          David Duncan 1916
                          Ernie Kovacs 1919
                          Ray Abrams 1920
                          Marty Paich 1925
                          Jeanne Moreau 1928
                          Ken Errair (The Four Freshmen) 1928
                          Chita Rivera 1933
                          Lou Antonio 1934
                          Eugene Church 1938
                          Johnny Russel 1940
                          Gil Gerard 1943
                          Rutger Hauer 1944
                          Jerry Lawson (The Persuasions) 1944
                          Anita Pointer (The Pointer Sisters) 1948
                          Richard Dean Anderson 1950
                          Bill Cunningham (The Box Tops) 1950
                          Danny Federici (E Street Band) 1950
                          Robin Zander (Cheap Trick) 1953
                          Princess Caroline of Monaco 1957
                          Earl Falconer (UB40) 1959
                          Gail O'Grady 1963
                          Mariska Hargitay 1964
                          Marc Nelson 1971
                          Tiffany-Amber Thiessen 1974
                          What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                          Faust

                          Comment


                          • January 24


                            1848 - James W. Marshall discovered a gold nugget at Sutter's Mill in northern California. The discovery led to the gold rush of '49.

                            1899 - Humphrey O’Sullivan patented the rubber heel.

                            1908 - In England, the first Boy Scout troop was organized by Robert Baden-Powell.

                            1916 - Conscription was introduced in Britain.

                            1922 - Christian K. Nelson patented the Eskimo Pie.

                            1924 - The Russian city of St. Petersburg was renamed Leningrad. The name has since been changed back to St. Petersburg.

                            1930 - Primo Carnera made his American boxing debut by knocking out Big Boy Patterson in one minute, ten seconds of the opening round.

                            1935 - Krueger Brewing Company placed the first canned beer on sale in Richmond, VA.

                            1942 - "Abie’s Irish Rose" was first heard on NBC radio.

                            1943 - U.S. President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Churchill concluded a wartime conference in Casablanca, Morocco.

                            1952 - Vincent Massey was the first Canadian to be appointed governor-general of Canada.

                            1955 - The rules committee of major league baseball announced a plan to strictly enforce the rule that required a pitcher to release the ball within 20 seconds after taking his position on the mound.

                            1964 - CBS-TV acquired the rights to televise the National Football League’s 1964-1965 regular season. The move cost CBS $14.1 million a year. The NFL stayed on CBS for 30 years.

                            1965 - Winston Churchill died at the age of 90.

                            1972 - The U.S. Supreme Court struck down laws that denied welfare benefits to people who had resided in a state for less than a year.

                            1978 - A nuclear-powered Soviet satellite plunged through Earth's atmosphere and disintegrated. The radioactive debris was scattered over parts of Canada's Northwest Territory.

                            1980 - The United States announced intentions to sell arms to China.

                            1985 - Penny Harrington became the first woman police chief of a major city. She assumed the duties as head of the Portland, Oregon, force of 940 officers and staff.

                            1986 - The Voyager 2 space probe flew past Uranus. The probe came within 50,679 miles of the seventh planet of the solar system.

                            1987 - In Lebanon, gunmen kidnapped educators Alann Steen, Jesse Turner, Robert Polhill and Mitheleshwar Singh. They were all later released.

                            1989 - Ted Bundy, the confessed serial killer, was put to death in Florida's electric chair for the 1978 kidnap-murder of 12-year-old Kimberly Leach.

                            1990 - Japan launched the first probe to be sent to the Moon since 1976. A small satellite was placed in lunar orbit.

                            1995 - The prosecution gave its opening statement at the O.J. Simpson murder trial.

                            1996 - Polish Premier Jozef Oleksy resigned due to allegations that he had spied for Moscow.

                            2000 - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Missouri law that limited the contributions that individuals could donate to a candidate during a single election.

                            2001 - In Colorado Springs, CO, Patrick Murphy Jr. and Donald Newbury were taken into custody after a 5-minute phone interview was granted with a TV station. They were the remaining fugitives of the "Texas 7."

                            2002 - The U.S. Congress began a hearing on the collapse of Enron Corp.

                            2002 - John Walker Lindh appeared in court for the first time concerning the charges that he conspired to kill Americans abroad and aided terrorist groups. Lindh had been taken into custody by U.S. Marines in Afghanistan.

                            2003 - The U.S. Department of Homeland Security began operations under Tom Ridge.

                            Birthdays

                            Hadrian (Roman emperor) AD 76
                            Frederick the Great (Prussia) 1712
                            Edith Wharton (Jones) 1862
                            Ann Todd 1909
                            John Beasley Brickhouse 1916
                            Ernest Borgnine 1917
                            Oral Roberts 1918
                            Maria Tallchief 1925
                            Marvin Kaplan 1927
                            Desmond Morris 1928
                            Doug Kershaw 1936
                            Jack Scott (Scafone) 1936
                            Bobby Scott 1937
                            Ray Stevens 1939
                            Neil Diamond 1941
                            Aaron Neville 1941
                            Sharon Tate 1943
                            Julie Gregg 1944
                            Warren Zevon 1947
                            John Belushi 1949
                            Becky Hobbs 1950
                            Michael Ontkean 1950
                            Yakov Smirnoff 1951
                            Elaine Giftos 1954
                            Julian Holland (Squeeze) 1958
                            Nastassja Kinski 1961
                            Keech Rainwater (Lonestar) 1963
                            John Myung (Dream Theater) 1967 - Dream Theater Merchandise
                            Mary Lou Retton 1968
                            Pat "Sleepy" Brown (Society of Soul) 1970
                            Tatyana Ali 1979
                            What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                            Faust

                            Comment


                            • February 3

                              1488 - The Portuguese navigator Bartholomeu Diaz landed at Mossal Bay in the Cape, the first European known to have landed on the southern extremity of Africa.

                              1690 - The first paper money in America was issued by the Massachusetts colony. The currency was used to pay soldiers that were fighting in the war against Quebec.

                              1783 - Spain recognized the independence of the United States.

                              1809 - The territory of Illinois was created.

                              1815 - The world's first commercial cheese factory was established in Switzerland.

                              1862 - Thomas Edison printed the "Weekly Herald" and distributed it to train passengers traveling between Port Huron and Detroit, MI. It was the first time a newspaper had been printed on a train.

                              1869 - Edwin Booth opened his new theatre in New York City. The first production was "Romeo and Juliet".

                              1900 - In Frankfort, KY, gubernatorial candidate William Goebels died from an assasin's bullet wounds. On August 18, 1900, Ex-Sec. of State Caleb Powers was found guilt of conspiracy to murder Gov. Goebels.

                              1913 - The 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified. It authorized the power to impose and collect income tax.

                              1916 - In Ottawa, Canada's original parliament buildings burned down.

                              1917 - The U.S. broke off diplomatic relations with Germany, which had announced a policy of unrestricted submarine warfare.

                              1918 - The Twin Peaks Tunnel began service. It is the longest streetcar tunnel in the world at 11,920 feet.

                              1927 - The Federal Radio Commission was created when U.S. President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill.

                              1941 - In Vichy, France, the Nazis used force to restore Pierre Laval to office.

                              1945 - Russia agreed to enter World War II against Japan.

                              1946 - The first issue of "Holiday" magazine appeared.

                              1947 - Percival Prattisbecame the first black news correspondent admitted to the House and Senate press gallery in Washington, DC. He worked for "Our World" in New York City.

                              1951 - Dick Button won the U.S. figure skating title for the sixth time.

                              1951 - The Tennessee Williams play, "The Rose Tattoo", opened on Broadway in New York.

                              1966 - The first rocket-assisted controlled landing on the Moon was made by the Soviet space vehicle Luna IX.

                              1969 - At the Palestinian National Congress in Cairo, Yasser Arafat was appointed leader of the PLO.

                              1972 - The first Winter Olympics in Asia were held at Sapporo, Japan.

                              1984 - Challenger 4 was launched as the tenth space shuttle mission.

                              1988 - The U.S. House of Representatives handed rejected U.S. President Reagan's request for at least $36.25 million in aid to the Nicaraguan Contras.

                              1989 - South African politician P.W. Botha unwillingly resigned both party leadership and the presidency after suffering a stroke.

                              1998 - Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker. She was the first woman executed in the U.S. since 1984.

                              1998 - In Italy, a U.S. Military plane hit a cable causing the death of 20 skiers on a lift.

                              2009 - Eric Holder was sworn in as attorney general. He was the first African-American to hold the post.

                              2010 - The Alberto Giacometti sculpture L'Homme qui marche sold for $103.7 million.


                              Birthdays

                              Horace Greeley 1811
                              Sidney Lanier 1842
                              Gertrude Stein 1874
                              Norman Rockwell 1894
                              Alvar Aalto 1898
                              James A. Michener 1907
                              Simon Weil 1909
                              Joey Bishop 1918
                              Bibi Osterwald 1920
                              John Fiedler 1925
                              Art Arfons 1926
                              Shelley Berman 1926
                              Frankie Vaughn 1928
                              Peggy Ann Garner 1932
                              Jeremy Kemp (Edmund Walker) 1935
                              Victor Buono 1938
                              Emile Griffith 1938
                              Fran Tarkenton 1940
                              Angelo D'Aleo (Dion and The Belmonts) 1940
                              Blythe Danner 1943
                              Dennis Edwards 1943
                              Eric Haydock (The Hollies) 1943
                              Bridget Handley 1944
                              Melanie (Safka) 1947
                              Dave Davies (The Kinks) 1947
                              Morgan Fairchild 1950
                              Nathan Lane 1956
                              Lee Renaldo (Sonic Youth) 1956
                              Thomas Calabro 1959
                              Lol Tolhurst (Cure, Presence) 1959
                              Keith Gordon 1961
                              Michele Greene 1962
                              Matraca Berg 1964
                              Maura Tierney 1965
                              Nick Hawkins (Big Audio) 1965
                              Grant Barry (Reel Big Fish) 1977
                              What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                              Faust

                              Comment


                              • Going back 1 day, The SEA HAWKS WON THERE FIRST SUPERBOWL AND I WENT TO SEE MY FIRST SUPERBOWL with my son!
                                Timeshareforums Shirts and Mugs on sale now! http://www.cafepress.com/ts4ms

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