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Old 01-01-2017, 05:03 PM   #481
Gravdigr
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Join Date: Apr 2007
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January 1, 2017

Today is New Year's Day, marking the first day of the new year.<---Get it?

Today is the last day of Kwanzaa.

Today is Global Family Day, "One day of peace and sharing.".

Today, you can celebrate National Bloody Mary Day, if you maybe celebrated New Year's Eve a little too much.

There are 364 days remaining in 2017.

There are 357 days until Christmas.


Events

45 BC – The Julian calendar takes effect as the civil calendar of the Roman Empire, establishing January 1 as the new date of the new year.

42 BC – The Roman Senate posthumously deifies Julius Caesar.

404 – Telemachus, a Christian monk, is killed for attempting to stop a gladiators' fight in the public arena held in Rome.

1001 – Grand Prince Stephen I of Hungary is named the first King of Hungary by Pope Sylvester II.

1068 – Romanos IV Diogenes marries Eudokia Makrembolitissa and is crowned Byzantine Emperor.

1259 – Michael VIII Palaiologos is proclaimed co-emperor of the Empire of Nicaea with his ward John IV Laskaris.

1438 – Albert II of Habsburg is crowned King of Hungary.

1515 – King Francis I of France succeeds to the French throne.

1527 – Croatian nobles elect Ferdinand I of Austria as King of Croatia.

1651 – Charles II is crowned King of Scotland.

1707 – John V is crowned King of Portugal.

1772 – The first traveler's cheques, which can be used in 90 European cities, go on sale in London, England.

1773 – The hymn that became known as "Amazing Grace", then titled "1 Chronicles 17:16–17" is first used to accompany a sermon led by John Newton in the town of Olney, England.

1781 – American Revolutionary War: One thousand five hundred soldiers of the 6th Pennsylvania Regiment under General 'Mad' Anthony Wayne's command rebel against the Continental Army's winter camp in Morristown, New Jersey in the Pennsylvania Line Mutiny of 1781.

1788 – First edition of The Times of London, previously The Daily Universal Register, is published.

1801 – The legislative union of Kingdom of Great Britain and Kingdom of Ireland is completed to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

1801 – Ceres, the largest and first known object in the Asteroid belt, is discovered by Giuseppe Piazzi.

1808 – The United States bans the importation of slaves.

1833 – The United Kingdom claims sovereignty over the Falkland Islands.

1847 – The world's first "Mercy" Hospital is founded in Pittsburgh by the Sisters of Mercy; the name will go on to grace over 30 major hospitals throughout the world.

1863 – American Civil War: The Emancipation Proclamation takes effect in Confederate territory.

1881 – Ferdinand de Lesseps begins French construction of the Panama Canal.

1892 – Ellis Island opens to begin processing immigrants into the United States.

1898 – New York, New York annexes land from surrounding counties, creating the City of Greater New York. The four initial boroughs, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and The Bronx, are joined on January 25 by Staten Island to create the modern city of five boroughs.

1902 – The first American college football bowl game, the Rose Bowl, is held in Pasadena, California.

1934 – Alcatraz Island becomes a United States federal prison.

1937 – Safety glass in vehicle windscreens becomes mandatory in the United Kingdom.

1942 – The Declaration by United Nations is signed by twenty-six nations. This is the basis for the modern United Nations.

1947 – The American and British occupation zones in Germany, after World War II, merge to form the Bizone, which later (with the French zone) became part of West Germany.

1947 – The Canadian Citizenship Act 1946 comes into effect, converting British subjects into Canadian citizens. Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King becomes the first Canadian citizen.

1948 – The British railway network is nationalized to form British Railways.

1953 - American singer-songwriter Hank Williams, Sr. died of a heart attack brought on by a lethal cocktail of pills and alcohol aged 29.

1959 – Fulgencio Batista, dictator of Cuba, is overthrown by Fidel Castro's forces during the Cuban Revolution.

1959 - Johnny Cash played a free concert for the inmates of San Quentin Prison. One of the audience members was 19 year-old Merle Haggard, who was in the midst of a 15 year sentence (he served three years) for grand theft auto and armed robbery.

1971 – Cigarette advertisements are banned on American television.

1983 – The ARPANET officially changes to using the Internet Protocol, creating the Internet.

1984 – The original American Telephone & Telegraph Company is divested of its 22 Bell System companies as a result of the settlement of the 1974 United States Department of Justice antitrust suit against AT&T.

1985 – The first British mobile phone call is made by Michael Harrison to his father Sir Ernest Harrison, chairman of Vodafone.

1989 – The Montreal Protocol comes into force, stopping the use of chemicals contributing to ozone depletion.

1990 – David Dinkins is sworn in as New York City's first black mayor.

1994 – The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) comes into effect.

1995 – The Draupner wave in the North Sea in Norway is detected, confirming the existence of freak waves.

1999 – The Euro currency is introduced in 11 countries - members of the European Union (with the exception of the United Kingdom, Denmark, Greece and Sweden).

Continued in next post
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Old 01-01-2017, 05:03 PM   #482
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Continued from previous post

2002 – The Open Skies mutual surveillance treaty, initially signed in 1992, officially comes into force.

2011 - Chuck Berry cut short a concert at Congress Theater, Chicago, Illinois after collapsing on stage an hour into the show. Berry slumped over a keyboard and did not move for a couple of minutes before being helped off stage, he returned 15 minutes later only to be forced off again almost immediately. The 84 year-old later re-emerged on stage but told fans he had no strength to continue performing.

2014 – Asteroid 2014 AA impacts the Earth over the Atlantic Ocean.

2016 – The Address Downtown Dubai burns over midnight as the New Year is rung in. The blaze started on the night of New Year's Eve 2015, by currently unknown causes. There was one fatality, a heart attack.

2017 – A nightclub in Istanbul, Turkey was attacked by gunmen. At least 39 people died from the shooting while attackers' motives are still unknown.

Births

1735 – Paul Revere; 1745 – Mad Anthony Wayne; 1752 – Betsy Ross; 1864 – Alfred Stieglitz; 1888 – John Garand(designed the M1 Garand rifle); 1889 – Charles Bickford; 1895 – J. Edgar Hoover; 1900 – Xavier Cugat; 1919 – Rocky Graziano; 1919 – J. D. Salinger; 1924 – Charlie Munger; 1925 – Matthew Beard ('Stymie' on Our Gang); 1936 – James Sinegal (co-founded Costco); 1937 – Matt Robinson ('Gordon' on Sesame Street); 1938 – Frank Langella; 1942 – Country Joe McDonald♪ ♫(Country Joe and the Fish); 1943 – Don Novello (Father Guido Sarducci from SNL); 1944 – Jimmy Hart 'The Mouth of the South'; 1956 - Diane Warren♪ ♫(writer of over 80 Top 20 hits); 1958 – Grandmaster Flash♪ ♫; 1967 – Spencer Tunick; 1969 – Morris Chestnut; 1969 – Verne Troyer (mini-Me); 1973 – Danny Lloyd (the boy from The Shining)

Deaths

404 – Telemachus; 1748 – Johann Bernoulli; 1953 – Hank Williams, Sr.♪ ♫; 1972 – Maurice Chevalier; 1982 – Victor Buono ('King Tut' on Batman TOS); 1992 – Grace Hopper (co-developed COBOL); 1994 – Cesar Romero ('The Joker' on Batman TOS); 1996 – Arleigh Burke; 1997 – Townes Van Zandt♪ ♫; 2001 – Ray Walston (My Favorite Martian); 2003 – Royce D. Applegate; 2005 – Shirley Chisholm; 2013 – Patti Page♪ ♫; 2014 – Juanita Moore (Imitation of Life, Momdigr's favorite movie); 2015 – Mario Cuomo; 2015 – Donna Douglas
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Old 01-02-2017, 02:12 PM   #483
Gravdigr
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January 2

Today is Nat'l Cream Puff Day, in the U.S.

Also celebrated in the U.S. today, is Nat'l Science Fiction Day, celebrated on Isaac Asimov's observed birthday.


Events

533 – Mercurius becomes Pope John II, the first pope to adopt a new name upon elevation to the papacy.

1777 – American Revolutionary War: American forces under the command of George Washington repulsed a British attack at the Battle of the Assunpink Creek near Trenton, New Jersey. [Assunpink? Ass & pink? Really?]

1860 – The discovery of the planet Vulcan is announced at a meeting of the French Academy of Sciences in Paris, France.

1920 – The second Palmer Raid takes place with another 6,000 suspected communists and anarchists arrested and held without trial. These raids take place in several U.S. cities.

1941 – World War II: German bombing severely damages the Llandaff Cathedral in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom.

1942 – The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) convicts 33 members of a German spy ring headed by Fritz Joubert Duquesne in the largest espionage case in United States history—the Duquesne Spy Ring.

1971 – The second Ibrox disaster kills 66 fans at a Rangers-Celtic association football (soccer) match.

1974 - US country singer, actor and radio presenter Tex Ritter died of a heart attack when he was trying to bail a member of his band out of jail in Nashville.

1974 – United States President Richard Nixon signs a bill lowering the maximum U.S. speed limit to 55 MPH in order to conserve gasoline during an OPEC embargo.

1976 – The Gale of January 1976 begins, which results in coastal flooding around the southern North Sea coasts, resulting in at least 82 deaths and US$1.3 billion in damage.

1979 - Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious went on trial in New York accused of murdering his girlfriend Nancy Spungen three months earlier, when he claimed to have awoken from a drugged stupor to find Spungen dead on the bathroom floor of their room at the Hotel Chelsea in Manhattan.

1981 – One of the largest investigations by a British police force ends when serial killer Peter Sutcliffe, the "Yorkshire Ripper", is arrested in Sheffield, South Yorkshire.

1997 - Guitarist Randy California from US group Spirit drowned when rescuing his 12-year old son after he was sucked into a riptide off Hawaii.

1999 – A brutal snowstorm smashes into the Midwestern United States, causing 14 inches (359 mm) of snow in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and 19 inches (487 mm) in Chicago, where temperatures plunge to -13 °F (-25 °C); 68 deaths are reported.

1999 - Chef went to No.1 on the UK singles chart with Chocolate Salty Balls (PS I Love You). Chef appeared in the cult TV series South Park, the voice was that of Isaac Hayes (who had a hit with Shaft in 1971).

2004 – Stardust successfully flies past Comet Wild 2, collecting samples that are returned to Earth.

2006 – An explosion in a coal mine in Sago, West Virginia traps and kills 12 miners, leaving only one survivor.

Births

1647 – Nathaniel Bacon; 1901 – Bob Marshall (Bob Marshall Wilderness Area); 1909 – Barry Goldwater; 1913 – Anna Lee (General Hospital); 1920 – Isaac Asimov; 1930 – Julius La Rosa♪ ♫; 1936 – Roger Miller♪ ♫; 1942 – Dennis Hastert; 1947 – Jack Hanna; 1952 – Wendy Phillips (Touched By An Angel, Promised Land, Falcon Crest); 1964 – Pernell 'Sweet Pea' Whitaker; 1968 – Cuba Gooding, Jr.; 1969 – Robby Gordon; 1969 – Glen Johnson; 1969 – Christy Turlington; 1971 – Taye Diggs; 1975 – Dax Shepard; 1978 – Karina Smirnoff; 1986 – Trombone Shorty♪ ♫

Deaths

1904 – James Longstreet; 1953 – Guccio Gucci (founded Gucci); 1963 – Dick Powell; 1963 – Jack Carson; 1974 – Tex Ritter♪ ♫; 1983 – Dick Emery; 1986 – Una Merkel; 1990 – Alan Hale, Jr. ('Skipper' on Gilligan's Island, The Gunfighter); 2000 – Elmo Zumwalt (namesake of the guided missile destroyer USS Zumwalt, and the Zumwalt-class of destroyers); 2011 – Anne Francis(Honey West, Forbidden Planet); 2011 – Pete Postlethwaite; 2012 – Larry Reinhardt♪ ♫(Iron Butterfly)
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Old 01-02-2017, 02:57 PM   #484
xoxoxoBruce
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No cream puffs, to many leftovers from the weekend.
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The descent of man ~ Nixon, Friedman, Reagan, Trump.
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Old 01-03-2017, 02:05 PM   #485
Gravdigr
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January 3

Today the U.S. celebrates National Chocolate Covered Cherry Day.


Events

1521 – Pope Leo X excommunicates Martin Luther in the papal bull Decet Romanum Pontificem.

1749 – Benning Wentworth issues the first of the New Hampshire Grants, leading to the establishment of Vermont.

1777 – American General George Washington defeats British General Lord Cornwallis at the Battle of Princeton.

1823 – Stephen F. Austin receives a grant of land in Texas from the government of Mexico.

1870 – Construction of the Brooklyn Bridge begins.

1888 – The James Lick telescope at the Lick Observatory, measuring 91 cm in diameter, is used for the first time. It was the largest refracting telescope in the world at the time.

1911 – A gun battle in the East End of London left two dead and sparked a political row over the involvement of then-Home Secretary Winston Churchill.

1913 – An Atlantic coast storm sets the lowest confirmed barometric pressure reading (28.21 inHg) for a non-tropical system in the continental United States.

1938 – The March of Dimes is established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

1946 – Popular Canadian American jockey George Woolf dies in a freak accident during a race; the annual George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award is created to honor him. [Woolf is famous for having ridden Seabiscuit to victory in a match race over Triple Crown winner War Admiral. When asked what was the best race horse he'd ever ridden, Woolf didn't hesitate when he answered "Seabiscuit."]

1947 – Proceedings of the U.S. Congress are televised for the first time.

1953 – Frances P. Bolton and her son, Oliver from Ohio, become the first mother and son to serve simultaneously in the U.S. Congress.

1956 – A fire damages the top part of the Eiffel Tower.

1957 – The Hamilton Watch Company introduces the first electric watch, the Hamilton Electric 500.

1959 – Alaska is admitted as the 49th U.S. state.

1961 – The SL-1 nuclear reactor is destroyed by a steam explosion in the only reactor incident in the United States to cause immediate fatalities.

1962 – Pope John XXIII excommunicates Fidel Castro.

1967 - Having received a US army draft notice, The Beach Boys' Carl Wilson refused to be sworn in, saying he was a conscientious objector.

1977 – Apple Computer is incorporated.

1987 - Aretha Franklin became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

1990 – Manuel Noriega, former leader of Panama, surrenders to American forces.

1999 – The Mars Polar Lander is launched.

2002 – Israeli forces seize the Palestinian freighter Karine A in the Red Sea, finding 50 tons of weapons.

Births

106 BC – Cicero; 1892 – J.R.R. Tolkien; 1894 – ZaSu Pitts; 1907 – Ray Milland; 1909 – Victor Borge; 1911 – John Sturges (director The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral); 1923 – Hank Stram; 1926 – George Martin "The Fifth Beatle"; 1929 – Sergio Leone (invented the 'spaghetti western', director of the Dollars Trilogy); 1929 – Gordon Moore (co-founder of Intel Corporation); 1930 – Robert Loggia ("Get on the wire, tell them how to bring those sons of bitches down."); 1932 – Dabney Coleman; 1937 – Glen A. Larson (created B. J. and the Bear, The Fall Guy, Magnum, P.I., Knight Rider, Quincy M.E., Alias Smith & Jones, et al); 1939 – Bobby Hull; 1945 – Stephen Stills♪ ♫(Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young, Buffalo Springfield); 1946 – John Paul Jones(Led Zeppelin); 1950 – Victoria Principal; 1956 – Mel Gibson; 1969 – Michael Schumacher; 1975 – Danica McKellar; 1981 – Eli Manning; 1988 – J. R. Hildebrand

Deaths

1795 – Josiah Wedgwood (fine china); 1903 – Alois Hitler (if only he'd used a condom); 1945 – Edgar Cayce (<--Interesting read.); 1946 – William Joyce (Lord Haw-Haw); 1967 – Jack Ruby (shot Lee Harvey Oswald); 1979 – Conrad Hilton; 1988 – Joie Chitwood(stunt car driver); 2009 – Pat Hingle (the judge in Hang 'Em High); 2014 – Phil Everly♪ ♫(The Everly Bros)
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Old 01-04-2017, 02:39 PM   #486
Gravdigr
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January 4

Today is World Braille Day, celebrating Louis Braille, who developed the 6-dot finger tip reading system known as Braille [by the age of 15].


Events

1490 – Anne of Brittany announces that all those who would ally with the King of France will be considered guilty of the crime of lθse-majestι.

1642 – King Charles I of England sends soldiers to arrest members of Parliament, commencing England's slide into civil war.

1717 – The Netherlands, Great Britain, and France sign the Triple Alliance.

1847 – Samuel Colt sells his first revolver pistol to the United States government. ["God created all men. Sam Colt made them equal."]

1853 – After having been kidnapped and sold into slavery in the American South, Solomon Northup regains his freedom; his memoir Twelve Years a Slave later becomes a national bestseller.

1865 – The New York Stock Exchange opens its first permanent headquarters near Wall Street in New York City.

1889 – The Oklahoma Land Run opens two million acres of unused Oklahoma Territory to first-come first-served settlers on April 22.

1896 – Utah is admitted as the 45th U.S. state.

1903 – Topsy, a performing elephant, is poisoned, strangled, and electrocuted by the owners of Luna Park, Coney Island, . The Edison film company shoots the film Electrocuting an Elephant of Topsy's death.

1912 – The Scout Association is incorporated throughout the British Empire by royal charter.

1951 – Korean War: Chinese and North Korean forces capture Seoul.

1958 – Sputnik 1 falls to Earth from orbit.

1959 – Luna 1 becomes the first spacecraft to reach the vicinity of the Moon.

1972 – Rose Heilbron becomes the first female judge to sit at the Old Bailey in London, England.

1976 – The Troubles: The Ulster Volunteer Force shoots dead six Irish Catholic civilians in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. The next day, gunmen shoot dead ten Protestant civilians nearby in retaliation.

1987 – The Maryland train collision: An Amtrak train en route to Boston from Washington, D.C., collides with Conrail engines in Chase, Maryland, killing 16 people.

1989 – Second Gulf of Sidra incident: A pair of Libyan MiG-23 "Floggers" are shot down by a pair of US Navy F-14 Tomcats during an air-to-air confrontation.

1998 – A massive ice storm hits eastern Canada and the northeastern United States, continuing through January 10 and causing widespread destruction.

1999 – Former professional wrestler Jesse 'The Body' Ventura is sworn in as governor of Minnesota.

2004 – Spirit, a NASA Mars rover, lands successfully on Mars.

2007 – The 110th United States Congress convenes, electing Nancy Pelosi as the first female Speaker of the House in U.S. history.

Births

1785 – Jacob Grimm (Grimm's Fairy Tales); 1809 – Louis Braille; 1838 – General Tom Thumb; 1890 – Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (founder DC Comics); 1895 – Leroy Grumman (co-founded Grumman Aeronautical Engineering Co.); 1900 – Bond, James Bond (no, not that one, this one's an orthin- an onritho- he studies birds); 1905 – Sterling Holloway; 1920 – William Colby; 1927 – Barbara Rush (Peyton Place, All My Children); 1930 – Don Shula [Bum Phillips was asked who was the greatest coach, he said "Don Shula. He can take his'n, and beat yourn, then take yourn, and beat his'n."]; 1935 – Floyd Patterson; 1937 – Dyan Cannon; 1957 – Patty Loveless♪ ♫; 1958 – Matt Frewer; 1958 – Julian Sands; 1959 – Vanity♪ ♫; 1960 – Michael Stipe♪ ♫(R.E.M.); 1962 – Robin Guthrie♪ ♫(Cocteau Twins); 1962 – Peter Steele(Type O Negative); 1963 – Dave Foley; 1963 – Till Lindemann♪ ♫(Rammstein); 1965 – Julia Ormond; 1966 – Deana Carter♪ ♫

Deaths

1821 – Elizabeth Ann Seton; 1877 – Cornelius Vanderbilt; 1960 – Albert Camus; 1961 – Erwin Schrφdinger (Schrφdinger's cat); 1965 – T. S. Eliot; 1967 – Donald Campbell; 1986 – Phil Lynott(Thin Lizzy); 1997 – Harry Helmsley (Leona's husband); 1999 – Iron Eyes Cody (the crying Native American in the old anti-pollution commercial); 2001 – Les Brown♪ ♫; 2011 – Gerry Rafferty♪ ♫(Stealer's Wheel)
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Old 01-04-2017, 03:28 PM   #487
glatt
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Never heard of Peter Steele, but the "Type O Negative" comment intrigued me, so I looked it up, expecting some bloody story to follow.

Turns out it's a story of intellectual property and trying to come up again and again with a unique band name only to find out somebody beat you to it. For those as ignorant as I am, his band was "Repulsion" first but had to change its name because there was already another "Repulsion." Then it was "Subzero" and he even got a tattoo with a zero containing a minus sign, when he found out there was already another "Subzero." He already was committed to the tattoo and "Type O Negative" also could be used to describe that ink, so he stuck with "Type O Negative." It appears there are no other "Type O Negatives."
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Old 01-05-2017, 01:52 PM   #488
Gravdigr
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January 5

Today is the last of the Twelve Days of Christmas.

Tonight is Twelfth Night.

Today is Sausage Day, at least in Clitheroe, Lancashire in the northwest of England, and this is the only mention of it I could find.

Today is Nat'l Bird Day in the U.S.

The Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival begins today in Harbin, Heilongjiang, China.


Events

1066 – Edward the Confessor dies childless, sparking a succession crisis that will eventually lead to the Norman conquest of England.

1477 – Battle of Nancy: Charles the Bold is killed and Burgundy becomes part of France.

1757 – Louis XV of France survives an assassination attempt by Robert-Franηois Damiens, the last person to be executed in France by drawing and quartering, the traditional and gruesome form of capital punishment used for regicides.

1781 – American Revolutionary War: Richmond, Virginia, is burned by British naval forces led by Benedict Arnold, causing Governor Thomas Jefferson to flee the city.

1875 – The Palais Garnier, one of the most famous opera houses in the world, is inaugurated in Paris.

1895 – Dreyfus affair: French army officer Alfred Dreyfus is stripped of his rank and sentenced to life imprisonment on Devil's Island.

1914 – The Ford Motor Company announces an eight-hour workday.

1919 – The German Workers' Party, which would become the Nazi Party, is founded.

1933 – Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge begins in San Francisco Bay.

1949 – United States President Harry S Truman unveils his Fair Deal program.

1957 – In a speech given to the United States Congress, United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower announces the establishment of what will later be called the Eisenhower Doctrine.

1972 – United States President Richard Nixon orders the development of a Space Shuttle program.

1974 – Warmest reliably measured temperature below the Antarctic Circle of +59 °F (+15 °C) recorded at Vanda Station.

1975 – The Tasman Bridge in Tasmania, Australia, is struck by the bulk ore carrier Lake Illawarra, killing twelve people.

1991 – The United States Embassy to Somalia in Mogadishu is evacuated by helicopter airlift days after violence enveloped Mogadishu during the Somali Civil War.

1998 - Sonny Bono died in a skiing accident at a resort near Lake Tahoe, he was 62.

2004 - Kinks singer Ray Davies was shot in the leg while on holiday in New Orleans. The 59-year-old singer-songwriter was shot while running after two men who stole his girlfriend's purse at gunpoint.

2005 – Eris, the most massive and second-largest known dwarf planet in the Solar System, is discovered by the team of Michael E. Brown, Chad Trujillo, and David L. Rabinowitz using images originally taken on October 21, 2003, at the Palomar Observatory.

2014 – A launch of the communication satellite GSAT-14 aboard the GSLV MK.II D5 marks the first successful flight of an Indian cryogenic engine.

2016 - Donald Fagen, lead singer and founder of Steely Dan, was arrested by New York police and charged with assaulting his wife at their home. Fagen, was accused of pushing Libby Titus into a marble window frame, knocking her to the floor of their Manhattan apartment.

Deaths

1778 – Zebulon Pike (Pike's Peak); 1779 – Stephen Decatur; 1855 – King Camp Gillette (founded the Gillette Company); 1904 – Jeane Dixon; 1914 – George Reeves (Adventures of Superman); 1917 – Jane Wyman; 1923 – Sam Phillips♪ ♫(Sun Records); 1928 – Walter Mondale (42nd VPOTUS); 1931 – Robert Duvall; 1932 – Umberto Eco; 1932 – Chuck Noll; 1940 – Athol Guy(The Seekers); 1942 – Charlie Rose; 1945 – Roger Spottiswoode (director Tomorrow Never Dies, The 6th Day); 1946 – Diane Keaton; 1948 – Ted Lange ('Isaac' the bartender on The Love Boat); 1950 – Chris Stein(Blondie); 1953 – Pamela Sue Martin (The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, Dynasty); 1953 – George Tenet; 1959 – Clancy Brown (head guard 'Hadley' in The Shawshank Redemption); 1962 – Suzy Amis (The Ballad of Little Jo, Titanic); 1964 – Grant Young(Soul Asylum); 1965 – Vinnie Jones; 1966 – Kate Schellenbach(Luscious Jackson, The Beastie Boys); 1968 – Carrie Ann Inaba; 1969 – Marilyn Manson♪ ♫; 1975 – Bradley Cooper; 1978 – January Jones; 1922 – Ernest Shackleton; 1943 – George Washington Carver; 1979 Charles Mingus; 1982 – Hans Conried; 1988 – 'Pistol' Pete Maravich; 1990 – Arthur Kennedy (The Glass Menagerie, They Died with Their Boots On, Fantastic Voyage); 1994 – Tip O'Neill; 1998 – Sonny Bono♪ ♫(Sonny & Cher); 2005 – Danny Sugerman♪ ♫(manager The Doors); 2007 – Momofuku Ando (founded Nissin Foods, makers of Top Ramen); 2014 – Carmen Zapata
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Old 01-06-2017, 12:21 PM   #489
Gravdigr
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January 6

Western Christianity celebrates today as Epiphany, the day the Magi visited Baby Jesus.

In Ireland and Scotland, and other places, today is known as Little Christmas. Also known as Women's Christmas.


Events

1017 – Cnut the Great is crowned King of England.

1066 – Harold Godwinson (or Harold II) is crowned King of England.

1205 – Philip of Swabia becomes King of the Romans.

1322 – Stephen Uroš III is crowned King of Serbia.

1355 – Charles I of Bohemia is crowned with the Iron Crown of Lombardy as King of Italy.

1449 – Constantine XI is crowned Byzantine Emperor.

[Izzit just me, or, is there a pattern here?]

1492 – The Catholic Monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella enter Granada, completing the Reconquista.

1540 – King Henry VIII of England marries Anne of Cleves.

1690 – Joseph, son of Emperor Leopold I, becomes King of the Romans.

1838 – Alfred Vail demonstrates a telegraph system using dots and dashes (this is the forerunner of Morse code).

1839 – The most damaging storm in 300 years sweeps across Ireland, damaging or destroying more than 20% of the houses in Dublin.

1853 – President-elect of the United States Franklin Pierce and his family are involved in a train wreck near Andover, Massachusetts. Pierce's 11-year-old son Benjamin is killed in the crash.

1907 – Maria Montessori opens her first school and daycare center for working class children in Rome, Italy.

1912 – New Mexico is admitted to the Union as the 47th U.S. state.

1929 – Mother Teresa arrives in Calcutta, India, to begin her work among India's poorest and sick people.

1930 – The first diesel-engined automobile trip is completed, from Indianapolis, Indiana, to New York, New York.

1931 – Thomas Edison signs his last patent application.

1947 – Pan American Airlines becomes the first commercial airline to offer a round-the-world ticket.

1958 - Gibson Guitars launched it's 'Flying V' electric guitar. Guitarists who played a Flying V include, Albert Collins, Jimi Hendrix, Marc Bolan and Billy Gibbons from ZZ Top.

1967 – Vietnam War: United States Marine Corps and ARVN troops launch "Operation Deckhouse Five" in the Mekong River delta.

1974 – In response to the 1973 oil crisis, daylight saving time commences nearly four months early in the United States.

1994 – Nancy Kerrigan is clubbed on the knee at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit.

2000 – Celia, the last Pyrenean ibex, was found dead after a tree had fallen on her.

2001 - Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour won the right to his dot com name. Dave took legal action in his battle to reclaim davidgilmourdotcom from Andrew Herman who had registered the URL and was selling Pink Floyd merchandise through the site.

2005 – American Civil Rights Movement: Edgar Ray Killen is arrested as a suspect in the 1964 murders of three civil rights workers.

2005 – A train collision in Graniteville, South Carolina, releases about 60 tons of chlorine gas.

Births

1412 – Joan of Arc; 1745 – Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier; 1832 – Gustave Dorι; 1878 – Carl Sandburg; 1880 – Tom Mix; 1882 – Sam Rayburn; 1912 – Danny Thomas; 1913 – Loretta Young; 1924 – Earl Scruggs♪ ♫; 1925 – John DeLorean; 1926 – Mickey Hargitay (w/Jayne Mansfield, father of Mariska Hargitay); 1928 – Capucine; 1930 – Vic Tayback (owner of Mel's Diner in Alice); 1931 – E. L. Doctorow; 1937 – Lou Holtz; 1940 – Van McCoy♪ ♫(wrote "The Hustle"); 1944 – Bonnie Franklin (One Day At A Time); 1946 – Syd Barrett♪ ♫(Pink Floyd); 1947 – Sandy Denny♪ ♫(Fairport Convention); 1950 – Louis Freeh; 1951 – Kim Wilson♪ ♫(The Fabulous Thunderbirds); 1953 – Malcolm Young(AC/DC); 1954 – Trudie Styler (wife of Sting); 1955 – Rowan Atkinson; 1959 - Kathy Sledge♪ ♫(Sister Sledge); 1960 - Muzz Skillings(Living Colour); 1960 – Paul Azinger; 1960 – Howie Long; 1962 – Michael Houser(Widespread Panic); 1964 – Mark O'Toole(Frankie Goes To Hollywood); 1968 – John Singleton; 1969 – Norman Reedus ('Daryl Dixon' on The Walking Dead, Boondock Saints I & II); 1970 – Julie Chen; 1970 – Gabrielle Reece; 1982 – Eddie Redmayne; 1984 – Eric Trump (second son of the President-elect of the United States, Donald Trump); 1986 – Alex Turner♪ ♫(Arctic Monkeys)

Deaths

1852 – Louis Braille; 1919 – Theodore Roosevelt (26th POTUS, "a cross between a walrus, and the spirit of war"); 1921 – Devil Anse Hatfield; 1944 – Ida Tarbell; 1949 – Victor Fleming (director Gone With The Wind, The Wizard Of Oz, et al); 1978 – Burt Munro (subject of The World's Fastest Indian); 1993 – Dizzy Gillespie♪ ♫; 1993 – Rudolf Nureyev; 2000 – Don Martin ("Mad's Maddest Artist"); 2006 – Lou Rawls♪ ♫; 2009 – Ron Asheton(The Stooges); 2016 – Pat Harrington, Jr. (building super 'Schneider' on One Day At A Time)
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Old 01-06-2017, 12:33 PM   #490
glatt
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Originally Posted by Gravdigr View Post
1994 – Nancy Kerrigan is clubbed on the knee at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit.
WHY?! WHY?!
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Old 01-06-2017, 01:22 PM   #491
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Well played
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Old 01-06-2017, 01:27 PM   #492
Flint
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This Day in History: FREEDOM DIED ON THE CELLAR
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There's a level of facility that everyone needs to accomplish, and from there
it's a matter of deciding for yourself how important ultra-facility is to your
expression. ... I found, like Joseph Campbell said, if you just follow whatever
gives you a little joy or excitement or awe, then you're on the right track.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Terry Bozzio
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Old 01-06-2017, 01:30 PM   #493
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Must you spread your shit absolutely everywhere?

Everyone here knows, KNOWS, you are bat shit insane for whatever reason, no need to spread it everywhere.
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Old 01-07-2017, 12:48 PM   #494
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Quote:
This message has been deleted by Flint. Reason: FREEDOM!1


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Old 01-07-2017, 02:19 PM   #495
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January 7

Today the United States of America celebrates (JFC) Nat'l Bobblehead Day. God save us.


Events

1558 – France takes Calais, the last continental possession of England.

1610 – Galileo Galilei makes his first observation of the four Galilean moons: Ganymede, Callisto, Io and Europa, although he is not able to distinguish the last two until the following day.

1782 – The Bank of North America opened in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as the United States' first de facto central bank.

1785 – Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard and American John Jeffries travel from Dover, England, to Calais, France, [a distance of ~25 miles] in a gas balloon.

1835 – HMS Beagle drops anchor off the Chonos Archipelago.

1894 – William Kennedy Dickson receives a patent for motion picture film.

1927 – The first transatlantic telephone service is established from New York, New York to London.

1942 – World War II: The siege of the Bataan Peninsula begins.

1945 – World War II: British General Bernard Montgomery holds a press conference in which he claims credit for victory in the Battle of the Bulge.

1948 – Kentucky Air National Guard pilot Thomas Mantell crashes while in pursuit of a supposed UFO. [Capt. Mantell crashed his P-51 Mustang in my hometown, about 3 miles from my house. My house wasn't here then.]

1959 – The United States recognizes the new Cuban government of Fidel Castro.

1980 – U.S. President Jimmy Carter authorizes legislation giving $1.5 billion in loans to bail out the Chrysler Corporation.

1999 – The Senate trial in the impeachment of U.S. President Bill Clinton begins.

2006 - Gary Glitter was formally charged with committing obscene acts with two girls aged 11 and 12 in Vietnam, the prosecutor in the southern province of Ba Ria Vung Tau said the charges would carry prison terms of three to seven years. Glitter, (Paul Gadd), had been held since November as he tried to flee the country over child sex allegations.

2006 - Pink married her motocross racer boyfriend Carey Hart on a beach in Costa Rica. More than 100 people attended the singer's big day, including Lisa-Marie Presley. Pink proposed to him during one of his races in Mammoth Lakes, California, by holding up a sign that read "Will you marry me?" Hart pulled out of the race to say yes.

2015 – Two gunmen commit mass murder at the offices of Charlie Hebdo in Paris, shooting twelve people execution style, and wounding eleven others.

Births

1800 – Millard Fillmore (13th POTUS); 1873 – Adolph Zukor (co-founded Paramount Pictures); 1895 – Hudson Fysh (co-founded Qantas Airways Limited); 1910 – Orval Faubus; 1911 – Butterfly McQueen (she didn't know nothin' 'bout birthin' no babies); 1912 – Charles Addams (created The Addams Family); 1920 – Vincent Gardenia; 1929 – Terry Moore; 1930 – Jack Greene♪ ♫; 1938 – Paul Revere(& The Raiders); 1946 – Jann Wenner (co-founded Rolling Stone Magazine); 1948 – Kenny Loggins♪ ♫; 1952 – Sammo Hung (Martial Law); 1956 – David Caruso (YEEEAAAAAHHHH!!!!!); 1957 – Katie Couric; 1959 – Kathy Valentine(The Go-Gos); 1963 – Rand Paul; 1964 – Nicolas Cage; 1970 – Doug E. Doug; 1971 – Jeremy Renner; 1974 – John Rich♪ ♫(Big & Rich); 1980 – Ivan L. Moody♪ ♫(Five Finger Death Punch); 1980 – Merritt Wever ('Nurse Zoey' on Nurse Jackie)

Deaths

1536 – Catherine of Aragon; 1932 – Andrι Maginot (The Maginot Line); 1943 – Nikola Tesla; 1980 – Larry Williams♪ ♫; 1988 – Trevor Howard; 1989 – Hirohito (124th Emperor of Japan); 1990 – Bronko Nagurski; 2001 – James Carr♪ ♫; 2002 – Avery Schreiber; 2007 – Bobby Hamilton; 2013 – Huell Howser; 2016 – Kitty Kallen♪ ♫
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