1984 The Television Academy Hall of Fame announces
its first inductees: Lucille Ball, Milton Berle, Paddy Chayefsky,
Norman Lear, Edward R. Murrow, William S. Paley, and David Sarnoff.
1981 Money for Nothing Joey
Coyle's six day spending spree ends when he is arrested at a New York
airport with $105,000 stuffed in his boots. He had found $1.2 million
that had fallen out of an armored vehicle. He was acquitted by reason of
temporary insanity. The 1993 movie was based on this event.
1966 The Beatles The London Evening Standard publishes a quote by John Lennon stating that "We're more popular than Jesus now." This prompted Beatles Bonfires and the banning of their music by radio stations.
1933 Pres. F.D. Roosevelt at his inauguration proclaims "The only thing we have to fear, is fear itself."
1933 First woman appointed to a U.S. president's cabinet, Frances Perkins becomes F.D. Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor.
1923 Butter The much loved food product is defined by Congress.
1923 American Battle Monuments Commission is established.
1913 U.S. Department of Labor is established.
1913 U.S. Department of Commerce is established.
1905 Theodore Roosevelt becomes the only president not to use the word "I" in his inaugural address.
1861 Civil War Flag of 7 stars and 3 stripes raised over the Confederate capitol of Montgomery, Alabama.
1857 Youngest U.S. vice president John C. Breckinridge is inaugurated at the age of 36 years and 48 days.
1849 President for a Day David
Rice Atchison becomes president for a day, while waiting for
president-elect Zachary Taylor to take the oath of office the following
day.
1809 First presidential inaugural ball Held for Pres. James Madison and Vice-Pres. George Clinton.
1791 Vermont becomes the 14th state.
1789 U.S. Constitution It goes into effect after having been ratified the previous June.
1789 First Congress under the U.S. Constitution meets in New York.
1634 Boston's first tavern Opened by Samuel Cole.
Births
1969 Chastity Bono daughter of Sonny and Cher.
1953 Kay Lenz American Emmy-winning actress. TV: Reasonable Doubts (Maggie Zombro).
1939 Paula Prentiss (Paula Ragusa), American actress. TV: He & She (She - Paula Hollister).
1934 Jane Goodall (Baroness Vanlawick-Goodall), anthropologist.
1906 Phil Davis d. 1964 cartoonist, drew Mandrake the Magician.
1901 Charles H. Goren d. 1991 American bridge expert, columnist, Goren on Bridge.
1891 Lois Wilson d. 1988 American
founder of Al-Anon, the support group for friends and family of
alcoholics. She was the wife of Alcoholics Anonymous cofounder Bill
Wilson.
1889 Pearl White d. 1938 American actress, starred in the movie serials The Perils of Pauline (1914-24). She was the most popular actress of her day.
1888 Knute Kenneth Rockne d. 1931 Norwegian-born
American football coach. His effective use of the forward pass, while a
player at Notre Dame, forever changed college football. His record as
Notre Dame coach (1914-31) was 105 wins, 12 losses, and 5 ties.
1877 Garrett Morgan d. 1963 African-American
businessman. He invented a gas-mask that was popular with American fire
fighters. He was also, reportedly, the first African-American to own an
automobile. This led to another successful invention of his: An improved traffic light (1922).
1747 Casimir Pulaski d. 1779 Polish general and American Revolutionary War hero.
Deaths
1996 Minnie Pearl b. 1912 (Sarah
Ophelia Colley Cannon), American comedienne, "Howdeeeeee!" She was the
first woman inducted into the National Hall of Fame (1994). Radio: Grand Ole Opry (1940-91). TV: Hee Haw (1969-91).
1994 John Candy b. 1950 Canadian Emmy-winning actor. Film: Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987) and Uncle Buck (1989, title role). TV: Second City TV, and Saturday Night Live.
1963 Édouard Belin b. 1876 French
engineer. He made the first telephoto transmission (1907). Using his
own invention, he sent one from Paris to Lyon to Bordeaux and back to
Paris.
1957 Dr. Evarts Ambrose Graham b. 1883 performed
the first lung removal operation. He removed the cancerous lung of a
fellow physician, curing the patient. He was one of the first to note
that almost all lung cancer patients were habitual smokers.
1952 Sir Charles Scott Sherrington b. 1857 English physiologist. He shared the 1932 Nobel Prize in medicine with E.D. Adrian for the discovery of the neurons.
1950 Adam Rainer b. circa 1898 giant
(7 ft. 8 in. tall). At age 21 he was 3 ft. 10½ inches, making him the
only known person to have been both a dwarf and a giant.
1938 George Foster Peabody b. 1852 American
banker, director of the Federal Reserve Bank at New York (1914-21). The
Peabody broadcasting awards were created in his honor (1940).
1883 John Graham Chambers b. 1843 British
sportsman, defined the Marquess of Queensberry boxing rules (1867),
which established the mandatory use of gloves, the ten-count rule, and
three-minute rounds.
561 Pelagius I b. ???? Italian religious leader, 60th Pope (555-561).
No comments:
Post a Comment