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  • Today is Thursday, May 29, the 150th day of 2008 with 216 to follow.

    The moon is waning. The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.

    Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include King Charles II of England in 1630; patriot Patrick Henry in 1736; Ebenezer Butterick, inventor of the tissue paper dress pattern, in 1826; English novelist G.K. Chesterton in 1874; movie composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold in 1897; entertainer Bob Hope in 1903; John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States, in 1917; actors Anthony Geary ("General Hospital") in 1948 (age 60), Annette Bening in 1958 (age 50), Rupert Everett and Adrian Paul, both in 1959 (age 49), and Lisa Whelchel in 1963 (age 45) and singers Melissa Etheridge in 1961 (age 47) and Melanie Brown of the Spice Girls in 1975 (age 33).



    On this date in history:

    In 1453, Constantinople (now Istanbul), capital of the Byzantine Empire, was captured by the Turks.

    In 1660, Charles II was restored to the English throne.

    In 1790, Rhode Island became the last of the original 13 states to ratify the U.S. Constitution.

    In 1848, following approval by the territory's citizens, Wisconsin entered the Union as the 30th state.

    In 1865, U.S. President Andrew Johnson issued a proclamation giving a general amnesty to all who took part in the rebellion against the United States.

    In 1953, Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal became the first men to reach the top of Mount Everest.

    In 1977, a flash fire swept through a nightclub in Southgate, Ky., killing 162 people and injuring 30.

    In 1985, British soccer fans attacked Italian fans preceding the European Cup final in Brussels. The resulting stadium stampede killed 38 people and injured 400.

    In 1989, Chinese students in Tiananmen Square erected a 33-foot statue similar to the Statue of Liberty.

    In 1990, renegade communist Boris Yeltsin was elected president of Russia.

    In 1991, scientists from Emory University discovered the gene that causes fragile-X syndrome, an untreatable mental retardation.

    In 1996, in Israel's first selection of a prime minister by direct vote, Binyamin Netanyahu defeated Shimon Peres to become leader of Israel. The margin of victory was less than 1 percent.

    In 1997, Lt. Kelly Flinn, the Air Force's first female B-52 bomber pilot, was discharged following an investigation stemming from adultery charges.

    The same day, the Army relieved Brig. Gen. Stephen Xenakis of his command of the Dwight David Eisenhower Army Medical Center at Fort Gordon, Ga., because of an apparently "improper relationship" with a civilian nurse caring for his wife.

    Also in 1997, Zaire rebel leader Laurent Kabila was sworn in as president of what was again being called the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    In 2000, the Indonesian government placed former President Suharto under house arrest on charges of corruption and abuse of power.

    In 2002, FBI Director Robert Mueller acknowledged that the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington might have been avoided if the FBI had acted on available information.

    In 2003, comedian Bob Hope was honored by the White House on his 100th birthday with establishment of the Bob Hope Patriotism Award for those showing extraordinary love of country and devotion to the personnel of the U.S. armed forces.

    Also in 2003, Microsoft agreed to pay AOL Time Warner $750 million to end a private antitrust suit brought by AOL's Netscape Communications.

    In 2004, the World War II memorial was dedicated on the National Mall in Washington. Some 70,000 veterans of that war were on hand.

    Also in 2004, a residential compound in Khobar, Saudi Arabia, was invaded by four armed militants who killed 22 and wounded 25, mostly workers in the oil industry from several counties.

    In 2006, relief workers struggled to prevent sickness and hunger among hundreds of thousands of survivors from the Indonesian earthquake in Java. More than 5,000 people were killed in the 6.3 quake.

    Also in 2006, Colombian President Alvaro Uribe won a second term by a sizable margin.

    In 2007, U.S. President George Bush announced tougher economical sanctions against Sudan for failure to adequately help end the humanitarian crisis in the country's embattled Darfur region.

    Also in 2007, two car bombings within an hour killed 38 people and injured at least 100 others in Baghdad. Elsewhere, reports said gunmen abducted five British workers at the Iraqi Finance Ministry headquarters.


    A thought for the day: Franz Kafka wrote this in his diary: "I have hardly anything in common with myself."
    What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
    Faust

    Comment


    • Today is Friday, May 30, the 151st day of 2008 with 215 to follow.

      The moon is waning. The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.

      Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (salpalaz - ts4ms);( JRStewart – ts4ms); -(Sylvia W – ts4ms): Mel Blanc, the voice of Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig and many other cartoon characters, in 1908; bandleader/clarinetist Benny Goodman in 1909; restaurant executive Bob Evans in 1918; Christine Jorgensen, who gained notoriety for undergoing a sex-change operation, in 1926; actors Clint Walker in 1927 (age 81), Keir Dullea in 1936 (age 72) and Michael J. Pollard in 1939 (age 69); NFL Hall of Fame running back Gale Sayers in 1943 (age 65); actors Colm Meaney in 1953 (age 55) and Ted McGinley in 1958 (age 50).



      On this date in history:

      In 1431, Joan of Arc was burned at the stake in Rouen, France, at age 19. She had been convicted of sorcery.

      In 1783, the "Pennsylvania Evening Post" became the first daily newspaper published in the United States.

      In 1806, future U.S. President Andrew Jackson took part in a duel, killing Charles Dickinson, a Kentucky lawyer who had called Jackson's wife Rachel a bigamist.

      In 1868, the first major Memorial Day observance was held to honor those killed during the Civil War. It was originally known to some as "Decoration Day."

      In 1922, the Lincoln Memorial was dedicated in Washington.

      In 1937, a battle between police and strikers at the Republic Steel Corp. plant in Chicago killed 10 people and wounded 90.

      In 1943, the Aleutian Islands of Kiska and Attu off the Alaskan coast were retaken by U.S. forces after being occupied by Japanese troops during World War II.

      In 1972, the unmanned U.S. space probe Mariner 9 was launched on a mission to gather scientific data on Mars, ultimately sending back valuable information and becoming the first spacecraft to orbit a planet other than the Earth.

      In 1972, three Japanese terrorists killed 22 people with automatic weapons at the airport in Tel Aviv, Israel.

      In 1982, Spain became the 16th member nation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

      In 1998, Pakistan conducted another underground nuclear test, despite condemnation from many leading countries and the imposition of U.S. economic sanctions.

      In 2002, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft announced the FBI would have expanded powers to monitor religious, political and other organizations as well as the Internet as a guard against terrorist attacks.

      Also in 2002, the massive cleanup was completed in the ruins of New York's World Trade Center, destroyed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack.

      In 2004, a standoff near Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, between Saudi authorities and terrorists who held 50 hostages ended when commandos stormed the building. At least nine hostages were killed by Islamic militants.

      In 2005, at least 27 people, mostly police officers, were killed and more than 100 were wounded when two suicide bombers exploded bomb vests in a city south of Baghdad.

      In 2006, U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow resigned, saying he was anxious to return to private life. U.S. President George Bush quickly nominated Goldman Sachs Chief Executive Officer Henry Paulson to succeed him.

      In 2007, U.S. President George Bush asked Congress for an additional $30 billion to fight AIDS globally.

      Also in 2007, in a Gallup poll of U.S. adults, one-third of respondents said they believed the Bible was literally true.


      A thought for the day: Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" that, "No one is so thoroughly superstitious as the godless man."
      What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
      Faust

      Comment


      • Today is Saturday, May 31, the 152nd day of 2008 with 214 to follow.

        The moon is waning. The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.

        Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (mikey0531-ts4ms) ; poet Walt Whitman and surgeon William Mayo, founder of the Mayo Clinic, both in 1819; radio humorist Fred Allen in 1894; clergyman-author Norman Vincent Peale in 1898; actor Don Ameche in 1908; U.S. Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., in 1912; Prince Rainier of Monaco in 1923; actor Clint Eastwood in 1930 (age 78); Peter, Paul and Mary's Peter Yarrow in 1938 (age 70); country singer Johnny Paycheck in 1938; NFL Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Namath and actress Sharon Gless ("Cagney and Lacey"), both in 1943 (age 65); actors Tom Berenger and Gregory Harrison, both in 1950 (age 58), and Kyle Secor ("Homicide: Life on the Street") in 1958 (age 50); actor/writer Chris Elliot in 1960 (age 48); actress Lea Thompson ("Caroline in the City") in 1961 (age 47); and actress/model Brooke Shields in 1965 (age 43).





        On this date in history:

        In 1790, U.S. President George Washington signed into law the first U.S. copyright law.

        In 1889, a flood in Johnstown, Pa., left more than 2,200 people dead.

        In 1902, Britain and South Africa signed a peace treaty ending the Boer War.

        In 1962, Israel hanged Adolf Eichmann for his part in the killing of 6 million Jews by Nazi Germany in World War II.

        In 1973, the U.S. Senate voted to cut off funds for U.S. bombing of Cambodia.

        In 1985, seven federally insured banks in Arkansas, Minnesota, Nebraska and Oregon were closed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. It was a single-day record for closings since the FDIC was founded in 1934.

        In 1990, U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev opened a four-day summit in Washington, focusing on the role of a united Germany in Europe.

        In 1991, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney announced the United States had begun storing military supplies in Israel for use in future conflicts.

        In 1994, U.S. Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., was indicted on felony charges, including embezzlement.

        In 2003, Eric Robert Rudolph, the long-sought fugitive in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic bombing and attacks on abortion clinics and a gay nightclub, in which two died, was arrested while rummaging through a dumpster in North Carolina.

        In 2004, a bomb ripped through a Shiite mosque in Karachi, Pakistan, while worshippers were saying evening prayers. Sixteen people were killed.

        In 2005, Mark Felt admitted that, while No. 2 man in the FBI, he was "Deep Throat," the shadowy contact whose help to Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein on the 1972 Watergate break-in led to U.S. President Richard Nixon's resignation.

        In 2006, officials said an estimated 200,000 people had died in the three-year civil in Sudan's Darfur region and 2 million more had become refugees. The government and one rebel group agreed to stop fighting earlier in the month.

        Also in 2006, Kimberly Dozier, the 39-year-old CBS reporter injured in a Baghdad bomb blast, was listed in critical but stable condition at a military hospital in Germany. Two members of the crew were killed.

        In 2007, U.S. President George Bush called on the world's top polluters to develop together a strategy to cut emissions of greenhouse gases.

        Also in 2007, a civilian Nigerian president was succeeded by another civilian for the first time in history.


        A thought for the day: Leo Tolstoy said, "It is amazing how complete is the delusion that beauty is goodness."
        What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
        Faust

        Comment


        • Today is Sunday, June 8, the 160th day of 2008 with 206 to follow.

          The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Venus, Mercury, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.

          Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include German composer Robert Schumann in 1810; architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1867; British geneticist Francis Crick, who helped determine the "double helix" structure of DNA, in 1916; actor Robert Preston in 1918; former first lady Barbara Bush in 1925 (age 83); actor Jerry Stiller in 1927 (age 81); comedian Joan Rivers in 1933 (age 75); actor/singer James Darren in 1936 (age 72); singer Nancy Sinatra in 1940 (age 68); singer/songwriter Boz Scaggs in 1944 (age 64); actress Kathy Baker in 1950 (age 58); actor Griffin Dunne in 1955 (age 53); "Dilbert" cartoonist Scott Adams in 1957 (age 51); comedian Keenan Ivory Wayans in 1958 (age 50); and actress Juliana Margulies in 1966 (age 42).



          On this date in history:

          In 1789, James Madison proposed the Bill of Rights, which led to the first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

          In 1861, Tennessee seceded from the Union to join the Confederacy.

          In 1869, Ives McGaffney of Chicago obtained a patent for a "sweeping machine," the first vacuum cleaner.

          In 1967, the USS Liberty, an intelligence ship sailing in international waters off Egypt, was attacked by Israeli jet planes and torpedo boats. Thirty-four Americans were killed in the attack, which Israel claimed was a case of mistaken identity.

          In 1968, James Earl Ray, an escaped convict, was arrested in London and charged with the assassination of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.

          In 1985, the United Nations said worsening famine in 19 African nations would claim tens of millions of lives despite massive international aid.

          In 1987, Fawn Hall, former secretary to Iran-Contra scandal figure Oliver North, told congressional hearings that to protect her boss, she helped him alter and shred sensitive documents and smuggle papers out of the White House.

          In 1990, Israel's nearly 3-month-old government crisis ended when Yitzhak Shamir and his Likud party won support of six right-wing and religious parties to form one of the most right-wing governing coalitions in Israeli history.

          Also in 1990, an explosion started a fire aboard the Norwegian tanker Mega Borg, 57 miles off Galveston, Texas. The blaze burned for days as part of tanker's load of 38 million gallons leaked into the Gulf of Mexico.

          In 1992, PLO's chief of European security was killed in Paris less than two years after his former chief was gunned down in Tunisia.

          Also in 1992, the U.N. Security Council authorized deployment of an infantry battalion to take over the airport in Sarajevo, Bosnia and open it to humanitarian aid flights.

          In 1994, U.S. President Bill Clinton received an honorary degree from Britain's Oxford University, which he had attended as a Rhodes scholar.

          Also in 1994, two of the major warring factions in Bosnia, the Muslim-Croat federation and the Bosnian Serbs, signed a cease-fire agreement.

          In 1995, U.S. Marines rescued downed American pilot Scott O'Grady in Bosnia.

          In 1998, EU foreign ministers urged NATO and the United Nations to consider military action against the Yugoslav Serbs in their crackdown on the rebellious province of Kosovo.

          In 1999, the case of five New York City police officers accused in the 1997 torturing of a Haitian immigrant ended with the conviction of one of the officers. A second officer pleaded guilty, three others were acquitted.

          In 2003, Condoleezza Rice, the U.S. national security adviser, said that U.S. President George Bush's claim in his State of the Union address that Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger was based on documents found to be forged.

          Also in 2003, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said he stands by his testimony before the United Nations that Iraq did have weapons of mass destruction before the war.

          In 2004, police in Milan, Italy, arrested an Egyptian man suspected of masterminding the March 11 Madrid commuter train bombings in which 191 people were killed and more than 2,000 were injured.

          In 2005, after a two-week trial, a jury in Miami found two former America West pilots guilty of operating an aircraft while drunk.

          In 2006, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and seven others were confirmed killed after an air strike on a house north of Baquba.

          Also in 2006, U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., and former Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani of New York came out on top in a new poll on possible 2008 presidential candidates.

          In 2007, leaders of the eight industrialized nations meeting in Heiligendamm, Germany, agreed to consider ways to cut greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2050 and to spend $60 billion to treat AIDS and other diseases in the Third World.


          A thought for the day: James Madison said, "I believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations."
          What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
          Faust

          Comment


          • Today is Monday, June 9, the 161st day of 2008 with 205 to follow.

            The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Venus, Neptune, Jupiter, Mercury and Uranus. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.

            Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (mschatz – ts4ms ); Russian Czar Peter the Great in 1672; composer Cole Porter in 1891; composer, conductor, inventor Fred Waring in 1900; actor Robert Cummings in 1908; guitarist and recording pioneer Les Paul in 1915 (age 93); Robert S. McNamara, former U.S. Defense secretary and World Bank president, in 1916 (age 92); journalist Marvin Kalb in 1930 (age 78); comedian Jackie Mason in 1931 (age 77); soul singer Jackie Wilson in 1934; sportscaster Dick Vitale in 1939 (age 69); and actors Michael J. Fox in 1961 (age 47), Johnny Depp in 1963 (age 45), Gloria Reuben in 1964 (age 44) and Natalie Portman in 1981 (age 27).




            On this date in history:

            In 1534, French navigator Jacques Cartier became the first European explorer to discover the St. Lawrence River in present-day Quebec, Canada.

            In 1898, Britain leased Hong Kong from China for 99 years. The territory returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

            In 1934, Donald Duck made his first screen appearance in "The Wise Little Hen."

            In 1943, The U.S. Congress passed an act authorizing employers to withhold income tax payments from salary checks.

            In 1973, Secretariat won racing's Triple Crown with a spectacular victory in the Belmont Stakes, first horse to do so since Citation in 1948. Earlier, Secretariat had captured the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness.

            In 1984, an Italian prosecutor's report linked the Bulgarian secret service to the 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II. Three Bulgarians were indicted but a trial failed to prove charges against them.

            In 1989, Chinese officials continued their crackdown on pro-democracy activists with arrests and a sweeping propaganda campaign.

            In 1993, Japanese Crown Prince Naruhito married former diplomat Masako Owada in Tokyo.

            In 1994, the U.S. House of Representatives voted to require the Clinton administration to stop participating in the U.N.-sponsored arms embargo against the Bosnian government.

            In 1995, Colombian police arrested Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela, believed to be a leader of the Cali drug cartel.

            In 1998, Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar was sworn in as Nigeria's military ruler, one day after the death of Gen. Sani Abacha of a heart attack.

            In 1999, Yugoslavia signed an agreement, pledging to withdraw all Serbian troops from Kosovo within 11 days.

            In 2003, former U.S. first lady Hillary Clinton's memoir "Living History" sold 200,000 copies the first day.

            Also in 2003, North Korea said it needed to develop nuclear weapons to save costs by reducing conventional forces and had no plan for nuclear blackmail.

            In 2004, the body of former U.S. President Ronald Reagan was flown to Washington for a state funeral. Earlier, more than 100,000 mourners paid their respects at the Reagan presidential library in California.

            In 2005, after weeks of protests, Bolivian President Carlos Mesa resigned.

            In 2006, the new Iraqi Cabinet was completed with the appointments of ministers of defense, interior and national security.

            In 2007, thousands took to Rome's streets to protest U.S. President George Bush's visit, clashing with police who responded with tear gas. The following day, Bush was greeted with enthusiasm when he became the first U.S. president to visit Albania.


            A thought for the day: Henri-Frederic Amiel defined charm as "the quality in others that makes us more satisfied with ourselves."
            What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
            Faust

            Comment


            • Today is Tuesday, June 10, the 162nd day of 2008 with 204 to follow.

              The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

              Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (susieq - ts4ms ); actress Hattie McDaniel, the first African-American to win an Oscar (best supporting actress, "Gone with the Wind"), in 1895; Britain's Prince Philip, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, in 1921 (age 87); Judy Garland in 1922; children's author and illustrator Maurice Sendak in 1928 (age 80); attorney F. Lee Bailey in 1933 (age 75); actor Andrew Stevens in 1955 (age 53); model/actress Elizabeth Hurley, in 1965 (age 43); Olympic figure skater Tara Lipinski in 1982 (age 26) and actress Leelee Sobieski in 1983 (age 25).




              On this date in history:

              In 1652, silversmith John Hull, in defiance of English colonial law, established the first mint in America.

              In 1692, in Salem Village in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Bridget Bishop, the first colonist tried in the Salem witch trials, was hanged after being found guilty of the practice of witchcraft.

              In 1898, U.S. Marines invaded Cuba in the Spanish-American War.

              In 1935, Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in Akron, Ohio.

              In 1942, the German Gestapo burned the tiny Czech village of Lidice after shooting 173 men and shipping the women and children to concentration camps.

              In 1943, Hungarian Laszlo Biro invented the ballpoint pen

              In 1989, the Rev. Jerry Falwell said his conservative lobbying group, the Moral Majority, had accomplished its goals and would be disbanded.

              In 1991, Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines erupted, spewing debris as far as 20 miles away.

              In 1992, Texas law officers urged a boycott of Time-Warner and Warner Bros. over a recording by rap artist Ice-T that they said encouraged the shooting of officers.

              In 1994, U.S. President Bill Clinton froze most financial transactions between the United States and Haiti and suspended commercial flights to the Caribbean nation.

              In 1995, Cuba announced the arrest of U.S. financier-turned-fugitive Robert Vesco on spying charges. Vesco had fled the United States in 1972 ahead of embezzlement charges.

              In 1998, a jury in Jacksonville, Fla., found the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. liable in the lung cancer death of a smoker. The jury awarded his family $950,000, including $450,000 in punitive damages -- the first such assessment in a smoking-related lawsuit.

              In 1999, NATO suspended its bombing campaign against Yugoslavia.

              In 2000, Syrian President Hafez Assad died from a heart attack at age 69. He had ruled Syria since 1970.

              In 2003, a three-member Ontario Court of Appeal in Canada ordered that full marriage rights be extended to same-sex couples.

              In 2004, Ray Charles, a 12-time Grammy-winning singer-pianist who pioneered the blending of country and R&B, died at his home in Beverly Hills. He was 73.

              In 2005, in a landmark civil lawsuit against the tobacco industry, the U.S. government scaled back its demands for penalties from $130 billion to $10 billion. The government had asked for the larger sum to help 45 million U.S. smokers quit smoking.

              In 2006, three detainees at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, hanged themselves in the first reported deaths at the facility, prompting more calls to close the facility.

              In 2007, Israeli planes attacked Gaza, one day after a Palestinian gunman rammed the security border and opened fired in Israel.

              Also in 2007, the Iranian government was reported intensifying its domestic crackdown of dissidents by targeting banks, unions and civic groups and accusing women and student groups of seeking to overthrow the government.



              A thought for the day: Joseph Joubert wrote, "Children need models more than they need critics."
              What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
              Faust

              Comment


              • Today is Wednesday, June 11, the 163rd day of 2008 with 203 to follow.

                The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include English playwright/poet Ben Jonson in 1572; German composer Richard Strauss in 1864; Montana's Jeannette Rankin, the first woman elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, in 1880; undersea explorer Jacques Cousteau in 1910; football coach Vince Lombardi in 1913; author William Styron in 1925; actors Chad Everett in 1936 (age 72), Gene Wilder in 1933 (age 75) and Adrienne Barbeau in 1945 (age 63); Scottish auto racer Jackie Stewart in 1939 (age 69); former football player Joe Montana in 1956 (age 52); and actor Joshua Jackson ("Dawson's Creek") in 1978 (age 30).



                On this date in history:

                In 1920, U.S. Sen. Warren G. Harding, R-Ohio, was chosen as the "dark horse" Republican candidate for president. That November, he was elected the 29th president of the United States.

                In 1927, U.S. President Calvin Coolidge welcomed Charles Lindbergh home after the pilot made history's first non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean, New York to Paris.

                In 1963, facing federalized Alabama National Guard troops, Gov. George Wallace ended his blockade of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa and allowed two African-Americans to enroll.

                In 1967, the Six-Day War between Israel and its Arab neighbors ended with a United Nations-brokered cease-fire. The outnumbered Israel forces achieved a swift and decisive victory in the brief war.

                In 1985, Karen Ann Quinlan died at age 31 in a New Jersey nursing home, nearly 10 years after she lapsed into an irreversible coma. Her condition had sparked a nationwide controversy over her "right to die."

                In 1987, Margaret Thatcher became the first British prime minister in 160 years to win three consecutive terms.

                In 1990, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down an anti-flag burning law passed by Congress in 1989, reigniting calls for a constitutional amendment.

                Also in 1990, former Reagan national security adviser John Poindexter was sentenced to six months in prison, becoming the first Iran-Contra defendant to receive prison time in the arms-for-hostages scandal.

                In 1993, North Korea said it would suspend its withdrawal from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

                In 1994, after 49 years, the Russian military occupation of what had been East Germany ended with the departure of the Red Army from Berlin.

                In 2003, a bomb explosion aboard a Jerusalem bus killed at least 13 people and injured 53 more.

                In 2004, a second service was held for former U.S. President Ronald Reagan in Washington, attended by President George W. Bush, the four living ex-presidents and world leaders. The body was flown to California for burial.

                In 2005, the world's richest countries agreed to a debt relief deal for the poorest nations, writing off $40 billion in debt.

                In 2007, a U.S. appeals court ruled that U.S. President George Bush cannot detain indefinitely as an "enemy combatant" a foreign national arrested in the United States.


                A thought for the day: John Keats wrote, "A thing of beauty is a joy forever." And it was also Keats who wrote, "Beauty is truth, truth beauty ... that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
                What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                Faust

                Comment


                • Today is Thursday, June 12, the 164th day of 2008 with 202 to follow.

                  The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                  Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include John Augustus Roebling, designer of the Brooklyn Bridge, in 1806; former U.S. President George H.W. Bush in 1924 (age 84); singer Vic Damone in 1928 (age 80); Anne Frank, whose diary told of hiding from the Nazis in occupied Holland, in 1929; author Rona Jaffe in 1932; actor/singer Jim Nabors in 1930 (age 78); jazz musician Chick Corea in 1941 (age 67); sportscaster Marv Albert in 1943 (age 65) and actor Timothy Busfield in 1957 (age 51).



                  On this date in history:

                  In 1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum was dedicated at Cooperstown, N.Y.

                  In 1963, a sniper killed civil rights leader Medgar Evers in Jackson, Miss.

                  In 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could not outlaw interracial marriages.

                  In 1971, Tricia Nixon, daughter of U.S. President Richard Nixon, married Edward Finch Cox in the first wedding in the Rose Garden of the White House.

                  In 1979, Bryan Allen, 26, pedaled the 70-pound Gossamer Albatross 22 miles across the English Channel for the first human-powered flight across that body of water.

                  In 1982, an estimated 700,000 people gathered in New York's Central Park to call for world nuclear disarmament.

                  In 1986, the South African government, faced with rising black unrest, declared a nationwide state of emergency.

                  In 1989, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that white workers who claim to be treated unfairly as a result of affirmative action programs can sue for remedies under civil rights legislation.

                  In 1990, the Russian republic's legislature, under Boris Yeltsin, passed a radical declaration of sovereignty, proclaiming Russia's laws take precedence over those of the central Soviet government in the republic's territory.

                  In 1991, the Russian republic had its first direct presidential elections with Boris Yeltsin winning. The event is celebrated in Russia as a national holiday known as Independence Day.

                  In 1992, amid extremely tight security and criticism of his administration's stand on environmental issues, U.S. President George H.W. Bush addressed the Earth Summit, urging rich nations to take specific action on a climate treaty by year's end.

                  In 1993, U.S. helicopters and gunships destroyed four of Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid's arms depots, one week after his forces allegedly killed 23 Pakistani members of the U.N. peacekeeping forces in a series of firefights.

                  In 1994, special counsel Robert Fiske took sworn depositions from U.S. President Bill Clinton and first lady Hillary Clinton about the Whitewater land deal in Arkansas. It was believed to be the first time a sitting president responded directly to questions in a legal case relating to his official conduct.

                  In 1999, Texas Gov. George W. Bush, son of the former president, announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination for the 2000 election.

                  In 2000, 50 years after the Korean War began the leaders of North and South Korea met in Pyongyang for the first series of talks.

                  In 2003, television news pioneer David Brinkley, one half of the legendary Huntley-Brinkley evening news team and host of the long-running Sunday public affairs program This Week, died at his home in Houston. He was 82.

                  Also in 2003, at least 70 Iraqis were killed in a U.S. attack on a terrorist camp near Saddam Hussein's hometown.

                  In 2005, Time magazine reported a secret document showing the use of pressure tactics in the interrogation of a suspected al-Qaida leader by the U.S. military at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

                  In 2007, U.S. Senate Democrats narrowly failed to get a vote of no-confidence on U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales who has faced intense criticism for the firing of nine U.S. attorneys.

                  Also in 2007, Sudanese government officials agreed to allow a joint peacekeeping force of about 19,000 troops from the African Union and the United Nations to be deployed in war-torn Darfur.

                  And, scavengers looking for scrap metal at an old Japanese World War II base in China came across 3,500 buried bombs. Experts said the bombs, which were hauled away safely, could have caused widespread damage had they exploded.


                  A thought for the day: T.S. Eliot said, "In my beginning is my end."
                  What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                  Faust

                  Comment


                  • Today is Friday, June 13, the 165th day of 2008 with 201 to follow.

                    The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                    Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include U.S. Army Gen. Winfield Scott in 1786; Irish poet and dramatist William Butler Yeats in 1865; actor Basil Rathbone in 1892; Mexican composer Carlos Chavez in 1899; football star Harold "Red" Grange in 1903; TV host Ralph Edwards in 1913; Bulgarian-born artist Christo (born Hristo Yavashev) in 1935 (age 73); actors Malcolm McDowell in 1943 (age 65) and Richard Thomas in 1951 (age 57); comedian Tim Allen in 1953 (age 55); and actresses Ally Sheedy in 1962 (age 46) and twins Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen in 1986 (age 22).



                    On this date in history:

                    In 323 B.C., Alexander the Great died of fever in Babylon at age 33.

                    In 1944, the first German V-1 "buzz bomb" hit London.

                    In 1966, in Miranda vs. Arizona, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that police must read all arrested people their constitutional rights before questioning them.

                    In 1967, Thurgood Marshall became the first African-American on the U.S. Supreme Court. U.S. President Lyndon Johnson chose him to succeed Tom Clark.

                    In 1976, Arizona Republic investigative reporter Don Bolles died as a result of injuries suffered when a bomb blew up his car 11 days earlier. He had been working on an organized crime story at the time of his death.

                    In 1977, James Earl Ray, convicted assassin of Martin Luther King Jr., was captured in a Tennessee wilderness area after escaping from prison.

                    In 1983, the robot spacecraft Pioneer 10 became the first man-made object to leave the solar system. It did so 11 years after it was launched.

                    In 1991, revising a policy with roots to the McCarthy era, the Bush administration agreed to remove almost all 250,000 names from a secret list of unacceptable aliens.

                    In 1993, 20 Somalis were killed and 50 more wounded when Pakistani members of the U.N. peacekeeping forces fired into a crowd of demonstrators protesting U.N. attacks on warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid.

                    Also in 1993, Canada got its first woman prime minister when the ruling Progressive Conservative Party elected Kim Campbell to head the party and thus the country.

                    In 1994, the ex-wife of former football star O.J. Simpson and a friend were found stabbed to death outside her condominium in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles.

                    In 1996, members of the Freemen militia surrendered, 10 days after the FBI cut off electricity to their Montana compound. The standoff lasted 81 days.

                    In 1997, jurors unanimously recommended convicted Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh be sentenced to death.

                    In 2002, Roman Catholic Church bishops and cardinals, meeting to discuss abuse charges against some priests, heard three men and a woman tell how their lives had been devastated by abuse and ill treatment by the church.

                    In 2003, Thai and U.S. officials arrested a suspected illegal arms dealer in Bangkok with radioactive material that could be used to make a "dirty bomb."

                    Also in 2003, thousands of protesting Tehran students ran the streets lighting fires and swinging chains in a third day of demonstrations.

                    In 2004, a Roman Catholic newspaper said U.S. President George Bush asked a Vatican official to help push U.S. bishops on certain cultural issues, including "the battle against gay marriage."

                    In 2005, pop superstar Michael Jackson was acquitted by a California jury on 10 counts of child molestation.

                    In 2006, U.S. President George Bush made a surprise visit to Baghdad to show support for the new Iraqi Cabinet. He said U.S. military forces wouldn't leave until the Iraqi government could stand on its own.

                    Also in 2006, the United States formally recognized Montenegro as a sovereign and independent state. Montenegro had been part of Serbia.

                    In 2007, the U.S. Defense Department said in a report that the expanded U.S.-Iraqi troop "surge" security drive had reduced violence in Baghdad and Anbar Province but that attacks were up elsewhere.

                    Also in 2007, the Palestinian faction Hamas, elected leaders of the parliament and devoted to destroying Israel, seized control of the Gaza Strip in fierce fighting with rival faction Fatah that left about 100 reported dead.


                    A thought for the day: Francis Bacon wrote, "It is as natural to die as to be born; and to a little infant, perhaps, the one is as painful as the other."
                    What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                    Faust

                    Comment


                    • Today is Sunday, June 15, the 167th day of 2008 with 199 to follow.

                      This is Fathers Day.

                      The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                      Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (arlene22 - ts4ms); Prince Edward of England, son of Edward III and known as the "Black Prince," in 1330; Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg in 1843; orchestra leader David Rose in 1910; artist Saul Steinberg in 1914; pianist Erroll Garner in 1921; U.S. Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., in 1922; former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo in 1932 (age 75); country singer Waylon Jennings in 1937; singer/songwriter Harry Nilsson in 1941; and actors Jim Varney in 1949, Jim Belushi in 1954 (age 54), Julie Hagerty ("Airplane!") in 1955 (age 53), Helen Hunt in 1963 (age 45), Courtney Cox Arquette ("Friends") in 1964 (age 44) and Neil Patrick Harris ("Doogie Howser, M.D.") in 1973 (age 35).



                      On this date in history:

                      In 1215, under pressure from rebellious barons, England's King John signed the Magna Carta, a crucial first step toward creating Britain's constitutional monarchy.

                      In 1752, Benjamin Franklin, in a dangerous experiment, demonstrated the relationship between lightning and electricity by flying a kite during a storm in Philadelphia. An iron key suspended from the string attracted a lightning bolt.

                      In 1785, two Frenchmen attempting to cross the English Channel in a hot-air balloon were killed when their balloon caught fire and crashed. It was the first fatal aviation accident.

                      In 1846, the U.S.-Canadian border was established.

                      In 1877, Henry Ossian Flipper, born a slave in Thomasville, Ga., became the first African-American cadet to graduate from West Point.

                      In 1904, the excursion steamboat "General Slocum" caught fire on the East River in New York, killing 1,121 people.

                      In 1944, U.S. forces invaded the Japanese-occupied Mariana Islands in World War II action. By day's end, a beachhead had been established on the island of Saipan.

                      In 1987, Richard Norton of Philadelphia and Calin Rosetti of West Germany completed the first polar circumnavigation of the Earth in a single-engine propeller aircraft, landing in Paris after a 38,000-mile flight.

                      In 1996, 206 people were injured when a bomb exploded in a mall in Manchester, England.

                      In 1998, Nigeria's new military ruler ordered the release of some of the political prisoners jailed under the previous regime.

                      In 1999, South Korean ships sank a North Korean torpedo boat, killing all aboard. The incident followed a series of confrontations in disputed territorial waters.

                      In 2002, Arthur Andersen, one of the nation's top accounting firms, was convicted of obstruction of justice by a federal jury in connection with the Enron investigation.

                      Also in 2002, as wildfires plagued several Western states, a Forest Service veteran admitted accidentally starting the biggest Colorado fire, which by then had consumed 100,000 acres, while burning a letter from her estranged husband.

                      In 2004, a U.S. Army general suspended after prisoner abuse was revealed at a Baghdad prison said she was ordered to treat prisoners like dogs. Brig Gen. Janis Karpinski said she was being made a scapegoat for the scandal.

                      In 2005, the trial of a man accused of organizing the abduction and slaying of three civil rights workers in 1964 got under way in Philadelphia, Miss., 41 years after the deed.

                      In 2006, at least 61 people, including 15 children, were killed when their bus hit a land mine in northern Sri Lanka.

                      In 2007, a Mississippi jury convicted a reputed Ku Klux Klansman in the abductions and killings of two black teenagers 43 years earlier.

                      Also in 2007, Mike Nifong, the Durham County, N.C., district attorney, admitted violating professional conduct rules in his vigorous handling of rape allegations against Duke University lacrosse players. The athletes were cleared.


                      A thought for the day: Georg Christoph Lichtenberg said, "A book is a mirror: when a monkey looks in, no apostle can look out."
                      What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                      Faust

                      Comment


                      • Today is Monday, June 16, the 168th day of 2008 with 198 to follow.

                        The moon is waxing. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.


                        Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (Fisch-ts4ms); film comedian Stan Laurel (of Laurel and Hardy) in 1890; publisher Katharine Graham in 1917; authors Erich Segal in 1937 (age 71) and Joyce Carol Oates in 1938 (age 70); actress Joan Van Ark in 1943 (age 65); boxer Roberto Duran in 1951 (age 57); and actress Laurie Metcalf ("Roseanne") in 1955 (age 53).




                        On this date in history:

                        In 1883, the New York Giants had the first Ladies' Day baseball game.

                        In 1917, the first Congress of Soviets was convened in Russia.

                        In 1958, the leader of the unsuccessful Hungarian uprising against Soviet rule, former Premier Imre Nagy, was executed.

                        In 1963, the Soviet Union put the first woman into space, cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova.

                        In 1977, Leonid Ilich Brezhnev, first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party since 1964, was elected president of the Supreme Soviet, thereby becoming both head of party and head of state.

                        In 1986, South African blacks marked the 10th anniversary of the Soweto uprising with a one-day strike. Eleven blacks were killed in the resulting violence.

                        In 1987, the last surviving dusky seaside sparrow died at Walt Disney World.

                        In 1992, U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Russian President Boris Yeltsin met at the White House for the first U.S.-Russian summit.

                        Also in 1992, former U.S. Defense Secretary Casper Weinberger was indicted on five felony counts of lying to Congress and investigators in connection with the Iran-Contra scandal.

                        In 1993, the U.N. Security Council voted to impose a worldwide ban on oil shipments to Haiti.

                        In 1998, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic indicated a willingness to resume peace talks with ethnic Albanian leaders about the rebellious Serbian province of Kosovo.

                        In 1999, U.S. Vice President Al Gore announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination.

                        In 2003, the militant Palestinian group Hamas reportedly was ready to agree to a cease-fire with Israelis.

                        In 2004, the U.S. commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks said Iraq played no role in the attacks and the CIA knew of a plot in June.

                        In 2005, the U.S. Army awarded the first Silver Star for bravery in combat to a female soldier in the Iraq war, Sgt. Leigh Ann Hester, 23, of Bowling Green, Ky.

                        In 2006, the U.S. House of Representatives rebuffed a mostly Democratic effort to set a timetable for returning U.S. troops home from Iraq. The Senate, which had defeated a similar amendment the day before, backed up the House action the next week.

                        In 2007, the bodies of 13 members of the Iraqi Olympic tae kwon do martial arts team were found near Ramadi, over a year after the athletes were abducted while driving to a Jordan training camp.

                        Also in 2007, leaders of the Episcopal Church in the United States rejected demands they adopt a stronger stand against homosexuality.



                        A thought for the day: "Neither a borrower nor a lender be" comes from "Hamlet." And the line about a bank being "a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don't need it" comes from Bob Hope.
                        What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                        Faust

                        Comment


                        • Today is Wednesday, June 18, the 170th day of 2008 with 196 to follow.

                          The moon is full. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                          Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include(Hostelling-ts4ms);(mihusker-ts4ms); Cyrus Curtis, founder and publisher of the Ladies' Home Journal, in 1850; journalist and publisher Edward Scripps in 1854; leg
                          endary Tin Pan Alley composer Sammy Cahn and financial journalist Sylvia Porter, both in 1913; singer/composer Paul McCartney and film critic Roger Ebert, both in 1942 (age 66); and actresses Carol Kane and Isabella Rossellini, both in 1952 (age 56).




                          On this date in history:

                          In 1812, the United States declared war on Britain.

                          In 1815, England's Duke of Wellington and Prussian Field Marshal Gebhard von Blucher defeated Napoleon at Waterloo in Belgium.

                          In 1975, Saudi Arabian Prince Museid was publicly beheaded in Riyadh for the assassination of King Faisal.

                          In 1979, U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed a strategic arms control treaty in Vienna, Austria.

                          In 1983, Sally Ride became the first American woman in space as the space shuttle Challenger was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

                          In 1990, James Edward Pough, 42, whose car had been repossessed, killed eight people and wounded five more before committing suicide at a General Motors Acceptance Corp. loan office in Jacksonville, Fla. He was believed to have killed two others a day earlier.

                          In 1993, eight U.S. military officers arrived in the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia to help plan the deployment of a U.N. force that would seek to prevent the Bosnia conflict from spreading.

                          In 1996, the U.S. Senate issued its Whitewater reports. The Republican report accused first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton of obstruction of justice.

                          Also in 1996, Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski was charged with two killings in California; he pleaded innocent. Charges from New Jersey would come later.

                          In 1997, Turkish Premier Necmettin Erbakan resigned under pressure after his governing coalition lost its majority in Parliament.

                          In 2000, Ethiopia and Eritrea signed a cease-fire, ending their monthlong war.

                          In 2002, a suicide bomber killed himself and 19 others when he detonated explosives aboard a bus in Jerusalem.

                          In 2003, two nights of rioting left the Lake Michigan community of Benton Harbor, Mich., covered with smoldering ruins and broken glass in the aftermath of a deadly police motorcycle chase.

                          Also in 2003, Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas O'Brien resigned as head of the Phoenix diocese two days after being charged with leaving the scene of an accident in which his car struck and killed a pedestrian.

                          In 2004, U.S. hostage Paul Johnson Jr., 49, was killed by his Saudi captors despite pleas from senior Muslim clerics.

                          In 2006, North Korea appeared poised to test-fire a missile after reports that satellite imagery showed fueling had been completed. The pending test drew sharp criticism from the United States and others.

                          Also in 2006, some 800 U.S. National Guard troops began working along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border as part of a federal plan to slow illegal immigration.

                          In 2007, the United States and the European Union announced they would resume aid to Palestinians. Meanwhile, hundreds of Palestinians waited at the Israeli border trying to escape from Hamas-controlled Gaza.



                          A thought for the day: Jose Ortega defined civilization as "nothing else than the attempt to reduce force to being the last resort."
                          What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                          Faust

                          Comment


                          • Today is Thursday, June 19, the 171st day of 2008 with 195 to follow.

                            The moon is waning. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                            Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include James VI of Scotland, later James I of England, in 1566; French philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal in 1623; the Duchess of Windsor, born Bessie Wallis Warfield, in 1896; Moe Howard, leader of the "Three Stooges," in 1897; bandleader Guy Lombardo in 1902; baseball legend Lou Gehrig in 1903; former U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., in 1914; film critic Pauline Kael in 1919; actresses Nancy Marchand in 1928 and Gena Rowlands in 1930 (age 78); author Salman Rushdie in 1947 (age 61); actress Phylicia Rashad in 1948 (age 60); singer Ann Wilson of Heart in 1950 (age 58); actress Kathleen Turner in 1954 (age 54); and singer Paula Abdul in 1962 (age 46).



                            On this date in history:

                            In A.D. 325, the early Christian church opened the general council of Nicaea, which settled on rules for computing the date of Easter.

                            In 1787, the U.S. Constitutional Convention voted to strike down the Articles of Confederation and form a new government.

                            In 1846, two amateur baseball teams played under new rules at Hoboken, N.J., planting the first seeds of organized baseball. The New York Nine beat the Knickerbockers, 23-1.

                            In 1856, the first Republican national convention ended in Philadelphia with the nomination of explorer John Charles Fremont of California for president. James Buchanan, a Federalist nominated by the Democrats, was elected.

                            In 1867, Austrian Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, installed as emperor of Mexico by French Emperor Napoleon III in 1864, was executed on the orders of Benito Juarez, the president of the Mexican Republic.

                            Also in 1867, the first running of the Belmont Stakes took place at Jerome Park, N.Y.

                            In 1905, Pittsburgh showman Harry Davis opened the world's first nickelodeon, showing the silent Western film "The Great Train Robbery." The storefront theater boasted 96 seats and charged 5 cents and prompted the advent of movie houses across the nation.

                            In 1943, World War II's Battle of the Philippine Sea began, as Japan tried unsuccessfully to prevent further Allied advancement in the South Pacific.

                            In 1945, one of the most famous -- and funniest -- of all comedy sketches, Abbott and Costello's "Who's on first?" routine, made its movie debut in "The Naughty Nineties."

                            In 1953, convicted spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed.

                            In 1977, Elvis Presley made his final live concert recordings, at a series of appearances in Nebraska. He died two months later.

                            In 1987, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the 1981 Louisiana law that required schools to teach the creationist theory of human origin espoused by fundamentalist Christians.

                            In 1991, the U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a plan to prohibit the export of military supplies to Iraq.

                            In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that prayers led by students at public high school football games are not permitted under the constitutional separation of church and state.

                            In 2004, federal prosecutors planned to seek a grand jury indictment of former Enron Chairman Ken Lay on charges stemming from the energy giant's collapse in 2001, largest bankruptcy in U.S. history.

                            In 2005, a suicide bomber killed at least 23 people, including some Iraqi police officers, in a crowded Baghdad restaurant. The next day saw suicide car bombers kill a reported 26 policemen and security forces in Baghdad and Irbil.

                            Also in 2005, opponents of Syrian domination won a majority of seats in the final round of Lebanon's parliamentary elections.

                            In 2006, Japan threatened "severe action" if North Korea launches a long-range missile as it was believed preparing to do.

                            In 2007, 10,000 U.S. and 3,000 Iraqi troops launched a major offensive targeting the Sunni jihadist terrorist group known as al-Qaida in Iraq in Iraq's Baquba area.


                            A thought for the day: Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote of cheerfulness, "the more it is spent, the more of it remains."
                            What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                            Faust

                            Comment


                            • Today is Friday, June 20, the 172nd day of 2008 with 194 to follow.

                              The moon is waning. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                              Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include (jebow – ts4ms); author-playwright Lillian Hellman in 1905; actor Errol Flynn in 1909; World War II hero Audie Murphy in 1924; actors Martin Landau and Olympia Dukakis, both in 1931 (age 77), Danny Aiello in 1933 (age 75) and John Mahoney ("Frasier") in 1940 (age 68); songwriter Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys in 1942 (age 66); singer Anne Murray in 1945 (age 63); TV handyman Bob Vila and concert pianist Andre Watts, both in 1946 (age 62); singer Lionel Richie in 1949 (age 59); actor John Goodman in 1952 (age 56); and actors Nicole Kidman in 1967 (age 41) and Michael Landon Jr. in 1964 (age 44).




                              On this date in history:

                              In 1893, a jury in Fall River, Mass., found Lizzy Borden not guilty in the ax murders of her father and stepmother.

                              In 1898, the U.S. Navy seized Guam, the largest of the Mariana Islands in the Pacific, during the Spanish-American War. The people of Guam were granted U.S. citizenship in 1950.

                              In 1900, in response to widespread foreign encroachment upon China's national affairs, Chinese nationalists launched the so-called Boxer Rebellion in Beijing.

                              In 1963, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to establish a hot line communications link between Washington and Moscow.

                              In 1967, the American Independent Party was formed to back George Wallace of Alabama for president.

                              In 1977, oil began to flow through the $7.7 billion, 789-mile Alaska pipeline.

                              In 1990, U.S. President George H.W. Bush broke off U.S. diplomatic contact with the Palestine Liberation Organization after the PLO refused to act against a factional leader who plotted to attack Israel.

                              Also in 1990, South African nationalist Nelson Mandela began a triumphant U.S. fundraising tour in New York.

                              In 1991, the German parliament voted to move its capital from Bonn to Berlin.

                              In 1994, O.J. Simpson pleaded "100 percent not guilty" to charges he killed his ex-wife and her friend.

                              In 1995, a military court acquitted Air Force Capt. James Wang of charges in the April 1994 downing of two U.S Army helicopters over Iraq. He was the senior director of an AWACS plane that failed to warn two U.S. jets that the choppers were friendly.

                              In 1997, four major U.S. tobacco companies and several state attorneys general, after months of negotiations, agreed to a $368.5 billion settlement to recover the costs of smoking-related illnesses.

                              In 1999, NATO formally ended its bombing campaign of Yugoslavia as Serb forces completed their withdrawal from Kosovo.

                              In 2000, Taiwan's new president invited his Chinese counterpart to take part in a peace effort similar to one begun by North and South Korea.

                              In 2003, a top lieutenant to Saddam Hussein told U.S. interrogators that the Iraqi leader and his two sons survived the war in Iraq. Saddam was later captured and, in a separate incident, his sons killed in a raid.

                              Also in 2003, up to 200 illegal immigrants were feared dead after their boat capsized off the coast of Tunisia on its way to Italy.

                              In 2004, Pakistan and India reached agreement on banning nuclear testing.

                              In 2006, former White House official David Saravian was convicted on four counts of lying to investigators and obstruction of justice in dealings with lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

                              In 2007, U.S. President George Bush blocked legislation to permit federal funding for stem cell studies for a second time. He vetoed a new proposal to lift restrictions on funding for the research.

                              Also in 2007, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak ordered the military to allow the evacuation of busloads of fleeing Palestinians from the Gaza Strip into Israel.



                              A thought for the day: Plutarch felt that "Character is simply habit long continued."
                              What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                              Faust

                              Comment


                              • Today is Monday, June 23, the 175th day of 2008 with 191 to follow.

                                The moon is waning. The morning stars are Neptune, Mercury, Jupiter and Uranus. The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.

                                Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer. They include French Empress Josephine, wife of Napoleon, in 1763; the Duke of Windsor, former British King Edward VIII, in 1894; pioneer sex researcher Alfred Kinsey, also in 1894; Alan Turing, computer scientist, in 1912; former U.S. Secretary of State William Rogers in 1913; director/choreographer Bob Fosse in 1927; singer June Carter Cash in 1929; runner and U.S. Olympic gold medalist Wilma Rudolph in 1940; Metropolitan Opera conductor James Levine in 1943 (age 65); U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas in 1948 (age 60); and actors Ted Shackelford in 1946 (age 62), Bryan Brown in 1947 (age 61) and Frances McDormand in 1957 (age 51).



                                On this date in history:

                                In 1845, the Congress of the Republic of Texas agreed to annexation by the United States.

                                In 1865, the last Confederate holdouts formally surrendered in the Oklahoma Territory.

                                In 1947, The U.S. Congress enacted the Taft-Hartley labor act over the veto of U.S. President Harry Truman.

                                In 1956, Gamel Abdel Nasser was elected first president of the Republic of Egypt.

                                In 1967, the U.S. Senate censured Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-Conn., for misusing campaign funds.

                                In 1984, an auction of John Lennon's possessions raised $430,000, including $19,000 for a guitar used while Lennon with the Beatles. Lennon was killed by a deranged fan in 1980.

                                In 1985, an Air India Boeing 747 from Toronto crashed off the Irish coast, killing all 329 people aboard in the world's worst commercial air disaster at sea.

                                In 1991, the Group of Seven industrialized democracies agreed to offer the Soviet Union associate membership in the International Monetary Fund.

                                In 1992, the largest study of its kind found that eating a large bowl of oat bran cereal each day leads to a "modest" drop in cholesterol.

                                In 1993, U.N.-imposed oil and arms sanctions against Haiti took effect.

                                In 1994, a U.N.-approved French intervention force crossed into civil war-torn Rwanda.

                                In 2001, despite church opposition, Pope John Paul II began a Ukrainian visit.

                                Also in 2001, Yvonne Dionne, one of the Canadian quintuplets whose 1934 birth was hailed as a medical miracle, died at age 67 in Montreal.

                                In 2002, two major Arizona wildfires merged and by the next day had consumed 330,000 acres and moved close to the small evacuated town of Show Low.

                                In 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld affirmative action in a University of Michigan case by a 5-4 vote. The high court also upheld the Children's Internet Protection Act, under which federally funded libraries must block obscene material from computers to which minors have access.

                                In 2004, al-Qaida threatened to kill the Iraqi interim prime minister as it said it had done to a former head of the Iraqi governing council.

                                Also in 2004, a U.S. lawyer sued Germany in a New York court for $18 billion as compensation for victims of the Holocaust.

                                In 2005, U.S, Vice President Dick Cheney said again in a TV interview that the Iraq insurgency was in its "last throes."

                                Also in 2005, U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., called on U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to resign, accusing him of mismanaging the Iraq war. Rumsfeld said he had tried twice to quit but was rebuffed.

                                In 2006, seven men, described by the FBI as "homegrown" terrorists, were held in Miami in an alleged plot against Chicago's Sears Tower and five federal buildings.

                                In 2007, the Bush administration sought other assessments of progress in Iraq that likely would differ from the one the top commander, U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus, must provide later this year in a reported effort to decide when U.S. forces can be cut back.



                                A thought for the day: Wernher von Braun said, "We can lick gravity but sometimes the paperwork is overwhelming."
                                What I once considered boring, I now consider paradise.
                                Faust

                                Comment

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