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#1 |
Moderator
Donating 4WT 18K Club Member |
That would be pretty cool Kat. Too bad you don't really remember it.
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To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. ECCLESIASTES 3:1 |
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#2 |
Donating 4WT Yakker
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 855
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Today April 29th
1992: Riots break out in L.A.
The city of Los Angeles was a scene of violence today after riots broke out following the acquittal of four white police officers charged with the videotaped beating of Rodney King. "Gov. Pete Wilson declared a state of emergency and 2,000 National Guardsmen were sent to armories and other gathering points to await orders as the city tried to quell the worst outbreak of violence since the Watts riots of 1965," reported The Capital on April 30, 1992. "Blacks dragged motorists from their cars and beat them, looters – most of them black – emptied a supermarket, and more than 300 fires were reported. At dawn, police with shotguns guarded firefighters as they battled more than 30 blazes, authorities said. Streets were largely deserted." NOTE: An estimated 55 people were reported dead when the rioting finally ceased several days later. The acquitted police officers faced a second trial one year later, in which two were found guilty of violating King's civil rights. 1993: Buckingham Palace opens to public Buckingham Palace announced today it will open its doors to the public in order to raise money to repair the fire-damaged Windsor Castle. "Treasures on view will include a raft of Old Master paintings, the world's finest collection of Sevres porcelain and antique French furniture, some from Versailles," informed The Intelligencer on April 30, 1993. "Admission will cost $12.50 for adults, and the palace expects up to 400,000 tourists a year. The government said the tours of Buckingham Palace plus new charges for visiting Windsor Castle are expected to meet 70 per cent of the repair bill." 1967: Muhammad Ali stripped of title Boxer Cassius Clay, known as Muhammad Ali, was stripped of his heavyweight championship title today after refusing induction into the United States Army on religious grounds. "I had the world heavyweight title, not because it was 'given' to me, not because of my race or religion, but because I won it in the ring through my own boxing ability," said Ali in a statement published in The Lima News on April 29, 1967. "Those who want to 'take' it and hold a series of auction-type bouts not only do me a disservice but actually disgrace themselves," he continued. NOTE: Two months later, Ali was found guilty of draft evasion and was sentenced to prison for five years. He was allowed to box again in 1970, and the Supreme Court reversed his conviction the following year. 1945: Dachau concentration camp is liberated United States forces freed 32,000 captives at the Dachau concentration camp today. "The political prisoners at Dachau wept with hysteria when troops of the U.S. Seventh Army cleared the enemy guards from the camp where gruesome torture rooms and gas chambers were located," read an article in The Daily Courier on April 30, 1945. Another 27,000 American and British prisoners of war were also freed when the U.S. Third Army found a large prisoner of war camp at Moosburg, just northeast of Munich. |
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#3 | |
Moderator
Donating 4WT 18K Club Member |
Quote:
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To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. ECCLESIASTES 3:1 |
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#4 |
Donating 4WT Yakker
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 855
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Today April 30th
1945: Hitler commits suicide
Adolf Hitler and his wife for one day, Eva Braun, committed suicide today. . Early newspaper reports stated Hitler was thought to have been slain by the Russians or to have died of a stroke, but no mention was made of suicide. It was not until almost two months later that newspapers revealed the couple had made a suicide pact. "Hitler shot himself through the temple, the chauffer said, while Eva Braun sent a bullet through her heart. Both died almost instantly. The source of this information apparently clarifying the mystery of Hitler's end as overlord of Europe was Erich Kempke, his driver since 1936," reported The Port Arthur News on June 21, 1945. "The bodies of Hitler and his bride were taken out into the chancellory garden, Kempke said, soaked with gasoline and burned." NOTE: Reports revealed that Hitler and his wife shot themselves while simultaneously biting into a cyanide capsule. Though some remains were discovered, many still believe that Hitler may have faked his death and gone into hiding, and that the remains are inauthentic. 1980: Beatrix crowned queen of Netherlands Princess Beatrix became queen of the Netherlands today upon the abdication of her mother, Queen Juliana. "Juliana signed the abdication document surrendering the throne at 10 a.m. in the royal palace on Dam Square, and Beatrix, her energetic, 42-year-old eldest daughter, succeeded her, becoming Holland's fourth successive female monarch and its sixth constitutional ruler," explained The Daily Intelligencer on April 30, 1980. NOTE: As the inaugural ceremonies were taking place, rioting erupted in the capital as protesters threw a smoke bomb into a crowd of spectators. 1975: South Vietnam surrenders The Vietnam War ended today when the Saigon government announced its surrender. "The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops – jubilant over the unconditional surrender that ended 35 years of war against American, French, Japanese and South Vietnamese forces – seized Saigon Radio and announced they were renaming the South Vietnamese capital 'Ho Chi Minh City,'" informed the Delta Democrat-Times on April 30, 1975. "One by one, the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops overwhelmed the holdouts and gained complete control of all of Saigon. They crashed tanks through the wall at the presidential palace and hoisted a huge Viet Cong flag – red on the top, blue on the bottom with a gold star in the center." 1973: Nixon's top aides resign Four of President Richard Nixon's closest aides resigned today. "Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst and three trusted White House aides – H.R. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman and John W. Dean II – were swept out of office today by the Watergate bugging scandal," reported The Lowell Sun on April 30, 1973. "The resignations came amid growing pressures from within the Republican party for a housecleaning and full disclosure of the facts of administration involvement in the Watergate bugging." 1939: First regular TV service begins in U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt appeared on television today for the opening of the New York World's Fair. His appearance opened the first regular television service in the United States. "Popular television in America, for years a fantasy of dreamers and a problem for scientists, was realized today. President Roosevelt and other guests at the New York World's fair inaugural were among the subjects telecast to homes and radio stores as far as 50 miles away," explained The Helena Independent on May 1, 1939. NOTE: At that time, television could only be broadcast 50 miles from the Empire State Building. Even then, television sets needed to be installed in positions that were in "the line-of-sight route." |
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#5 |
KAT'S KRAZY KORNER
Donating Member |
1945: Dachau concentration camp is liberated When Pete and I were in Germany we visited The Memorial site, I'll never forget it. http://www.scrapbookpages.com/Dachau...ook/index.html
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#6 |
Donating 4WT Yakker
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 855
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Today May 1
1971: Amtrak service begins
Amtrak, the National Railroad Passenger Corporation created by Congress, began operating 182 passenger trains today despite efforts to delay its official start. The government-backed system was met with criticism since more than 170 passenger trains throughout the U.S. were halted once the Amtrak changeover became effective. "The corporation was established by Congress last year to establish and maintain a backbone national rail passenger system connecting the nation's principal cities. This came in the face of mounting railroad requests to get rid of passenger trains being operated at losses running $200 million a year," reported the Iowa City Press-Citizen on May 1, 1971. NOTE: Even after cutting service to nearly half of the U.S.'s railroad passenger trains, Amtrak expected to lose $110 million within the first year of operation. The organization had hoped to achieve financial independence by 1974, but has not to this day. 1999: Mercury capsule from 1961 is discovered The Liberty Bell 7, which sank after Gus Grissom's manned space flight on July 21, 1961, was found today by an underwater salvage team. "The only U.S. spacecraft ever lost following a successful mission, the capsule is still shiny in spots with an intact window and the name 'Liberty Bell 7' clearly printed beneath it," informed The Intelligencer on May 3, 1999. 1967: Elvis marries Priscilla Elvis Presley, 32, married his longtime girlfriend, Priscilla Ann Beaulieu, 21, at a Las Vegas hotel today. Elvis met Priscilla, the daughter of a lieutenant colonel, when he was serving in the army in Germany in 1959. "With the life I had, I decided it would be best to wait (to marry). You know, all the shows and record engagements," Elvis told reporters in 1967. 1931: Empire State Building formally opens The Empire State Building formally opened today when President Hoover pressed a button in the telegraph room at the White House which turned on the lights. "On the site of the old Waldorf-Astoria hotel, at Thirty-fourth street and Fifth avenue, it reaches nearly a quarter of a mile in the sky. In the words of former Governor Smith it is 'the tallest thing in the world today created by the hand of man,'" explained The Gettysburg Times on May 2, 1931. 1900: Hundreds of miners killed in Utah A powder explosion at the No. 4 mine in Scofield, Utah, killed more than 200 people today. "The appalling nature of the disaster had not fully dawned upon the people of this place last night, as the company kept the grief stricken wives and children away from the scene of operation. All night long lights were kept burning in every home in Scofield and winter quarters and the moans of mothers and the piteous cries of the many orphans are heart-rending," reported the Reno Evening Gazette on May 2, 1900. 1893: World's Fair opens in Chicago The Columbian Exposition, a World's Fair held as a tribute to the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' discovery of the New World, opened today in Chicago. "Every great nation of the Old World was represented at today's ceremonies. England, Germany, France, Italy and Spain had their officials there, men of travel and experience, who have studied every great exposition of modern times, and they will see the glories of the last and greatest European one, eclipsed and diminished," informed the Davenport Daily Leader on May 1, 1893. "Within reach of Paris there are six millions of people to the one million within the same reach of Chicago, yet this country has so far spent double as much money upon its great Columbian fair as France did upon its late exposition. The tremendous confidence and hopefulness of the Americans is made clear by this fact alone." NOTE: The fair was known as the Great White City since the exposition buildings were based on classical architecture and made out of a material resembling marble. |
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#7 |
KAT'S KRAZY KORNER
Donating Member |
1893: World's Fair opens in Chicago
My Maternal Grandmother was 4 yrs old and went to it. http://parallel.park.org/Guests/WWWvoice/1893chi.html
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#8 |
Donating 4WT Yakker
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 855
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Today April 2nd
1946: Riots erupt at Alcatraz
Inmates Bernard Paul Coy, Joseph Paul Cretzer, Sam Shockley, Clarence Carnes, Marvin Franklin Hubbard and Miran Edgar Thompson started a riot today in Alcatraz prison after a failed escape attempt. Coy, whose prison job was to clean the gun galleries, had reportedly thrown a master switch to open the cells. He overpowered a guard to gain access to weapons. "The fiercest prison mutiny in the Nation's history was uncontrolled in its second day as besiegers on Alcatraz island began lobbing 60-millimeter mortar shells into the barricaded cell-block and indicated that chemical warfare would be the next move against the convict holdouts," reported The Oakland Tribune on May 3, 1946. "Attacking U.S. Marines and prison guards already had used bazooka guns, demolition bombs, fragmentation hand grenades and other weapons of war in their all-out assault against the convict insurrectionists, barricaded in two separate parts of the cell block." NOTE: The rioting, which is now called the Battle of Alcatraz, lasted two days. When it was over, two officers and three prisoners were killed, while 14 guards and two inmates were wounded. 1972: J. Edgar Hoover dies J. Edgar Hoover, the infamous director of the FBI, died today of heart disease at the age of 77. "Hoover, the nation's chief law officer for 48 years, had become a legend in the United States, an 'untouchable' who shaped the FBI into a massive, powerful agency," explained The Lowell Sun on May 2, 1972. "The jut-jawed FBI head was permitted by presidential order to continue in his $42,500-a-year government job after reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70. Hoover, unmarried, dominated the bureau during his lifetime like no man in any other federal agency. Wielding vast power, he was said to lavish on the FBI the pride and possessiveness of a stern and watchful parent." 1955: Williams and Faulkner win Pulitzers "William Faulkner and Tennessee Williams, two writers who have captured many of the top writing awards of the last decade, Monday received Pulitzer prizes," informed The Daily Register on May 3, 1955. "Faulkner won the prize for 'A Fable,' the novel of trench life in World War I which took him nine years to write. Williams won his second Pulitzer prize for the play 'Cat On A Hot Tin Roof,' a drama about a twisted Mississippi plantation family." 1952: First commercial jet flights begin The De Havilland Comet, the world's first commercial jet airliner, took its inaugural flight today. "The sleek blue and white, four-engine jet liner, carrying a full load of 36 paying passengers, a crew of six and 30 bags of mail, left London airport at 3:14 p.m.," reported the Long Beach Press-Telegram on May 2, 1952. "With stops at Rome, Beirut, Khartoum in the Sudan, Entebbe in Uganda and Livingston in Rhodesia, it is due at Johannesburg in 23 hours and 40 minutes, slicing about one-third from the present commercial air travel time for the 6724-mile trip." 1945: Soviets announce fall of Berlin The Soviet Union proclaimed the capture of Berlin today. "The announcement was made by the Moscow radio which declared that 70,000 Germans were captured in the cleanup of the city. Stalin's order described the capital as the center of German imperialism. He said the German garrison defending Berlin had laid down its arms today and resistance had ceased at 3 p.m.," reported The Sheboygan Press on May 2, 1945. NOTE: The battle for Berlin began on April 16, 1945, and by the time the battle was over, Adolf Hitler had committed suicide. 1939: Lou Gehrig is benched Lou Gehrig's streak of 2,130 consecutive Major League games came to an end today when he was benched for what he called "the good of the team." On May 3, 1939, the Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune explained, "Lou Gehrig, the pressure off at last, sits on the Yankee bench for the first time in nearly 14 years and watches another, younger man play first base for the three-time world champions. It must have been a cruelly hard decision for the old 'Iron Horse' to make, when he told Manager Joe McCarthy he was ready to call it a career after 2,130 consecutive games." |
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#9 |
KAT'S KRAZY KORNER
Donating Member |
May 2, 2007 at 5:27 P.M. Donald M. Carasella (Pete) went Home to Jesus.......
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