February 8th is

Boy Scout Day *
Kite Flying Day

Molasses Bar Day
Potato Lover’s Day
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MORE! Daniel Bernoulli, Kate Chopin and Cardinal Mindszenty, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Iran – National Air Force Day
Slovenia – Prešeren’s Day *
Congo Republic – Youth Day
United States – Fernandina Beach FL:
Amelia Island Chamber Music Festival
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On This Day in HISTORY
1237 – The Russian city of Vladimir-on-Klyazma, originally a frontier outpost, but now, as the center of the Vladimir-Suzdal Principality, in an ambitious building boom, is overrun by the Mongol-Tartars of the Golden Hoarde under Batu Khan after an extended siege; the family of Grand Prince Yuri II burned to death in the church where they sought refuge; only three of the ambitious buildings survived; White Monuments of Vladimir and Suzdal, now designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site

1575 – Leiden University, oldest university in the Netherlands, is founded by William, Prince of Orange; at the time, the only university in Holland was under the control of Spain, so the motto chosen for the new school, Libertatis Praesidium (bastion of freedom) had special meaning for the Dutch; there are an impressive 16 Nobel Laureates among Leiden’s alumni

1587 – Mary, Queen of Scots, is executed, after the Babington Plot to murder her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I, is exposed
1590 – Luis de Carvajal, governor of the Spanish province of Nuevo León in Mexico, accused of capturing and selling Indians as slaves and, his descent from Portuguese conversos being exposed, is tortured by the Spanish Inquisition, and confesses that his sister secretly still practices Judaism
1601 – Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, rebels against Queen Elizabeth I but the revolt is quickly crushed

1693 – The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, is granted a charter by King William III and Queen Mary II
1700 – Daniel Bernoulli born, Swiss mathematician and physicist; noted for Bernoulli’s Principle on the conservation of energy

1735 – First known opera performance in U.S., Flora, in Charleston SC
1795 – Friedlieb Ferdinand Runge born, German chemist, got sugar from beet juice
1817 – Grand Marshal Juan Gregorio de Las Heras leads an army across the Andes to join San Martín and liberate Chile from Spain
1819 – John Ruskin born, English author, Art critic, and social thinker

1820 – William Tecumseh Sherman born, American Union general in the Civil War
1828 – Jules Verne born, French writer, pioneer in science fiction

1837 – Richard Johnson becomes the only Vice President of the United States chosen by the United States Senate under the provisions of the 12th Amendment, after falling one short of the electoral votes needed. When Virginia delegates deadlocked the Electoral College by abstaining, the decision went to the Senate. However, even his military exploits during the War of 1812 were negated by his relationship with Julia Chinn, an octoroon slave. Unlike other leaders who had African-American mistresses but never mentioned them, Johnson openly treated Chinn as his common law wife, and when he gave his surname to their two daughters, the scandal cost him re-nomination as Van Buren’s running mate in 1840
1849 – France Prešeren, Slovenia’s national poet, dies – now commemorated as Prešeren’s Day * the national cultural holiday of Slovenia
1850 – Kate Chopin born, American author; The Awakening, her pioneering novel took women’s conflicts between marriage-motherhood and their own desires seriously

1865 – Delaware refuses to ratify the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which abolishes Slavery, finally ratifying it along with the 14th and 15th Amendments on February 12, 1901
1865 – Martin Robison Delany becomes the first black major in US Army
1879 – Sandford Fleming first proposes adoption of Universal Standard Time at a meeting of the Royal Canadian Institute
1880 – Franz Marc born, German painter, a key figure in German Expressionism

1885 – The first U.S. government-approved Japanese immigrants arrive in Hawaii
1886 – Wilhelm Koppers born, cultural anthropologist, human society origin theories from studies of hunter-gatherer tribes
1887 – The Dawes General Allotment Act authorizes the U.S. President to survey Native American tribal land and divide it into allotments for individual Indians; those who accepted allotments and loved separately from their tribe would be granted U.S. citizenship; the act also will allow the government to classify as “excess” those Indian reservation lands remaining after allotments, and to sell those lands on the open market, allowing purchase and settlement by non-Native Americans
1894 – The Enforcement Act is repealed, making it easier to disenfranchise black men
1895 – Tchaikovsky/Petipa’s ballet “Swan Lake” premieres in St Petersburg
1898 – John Sherman patents machine to fold and seal envelopes
1899 – Lonnie Johnson born, American blues-jazz songwriter, pioneer of jazz guitar
1904 – Battle of Port Arthur: A surprise torpedo attack by the Japanese at Port Arthur, China starts the Russo-Japanese War
1904 – Dutch Colonial troops, General van Daalen’s Marechaussee regiment launches a military campaign employing ‘scorched earth’ tactics against the Achehnese and Bataks people, committing genocide with few casualties among the Dutch troops, consolidating Dutch power in the East Indies
1906 – Chester Carlson born, American physicist-inventor of Xerography, precursor to the invention of the photocopier
1910 – Boy Scouts Day * – Boy Scouts of America is incorporated by William Boyce
1911 – Elizabeth Bishop born, American poet; Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 1949 to 1950, 1956 Pulitzer Prize winner for Poetry
1914 – Bill Finger born, American comic book writer, co-creator of Batman
1915 – D. W. Griffith’s controversial The Birth of a Nation premieres in Los Angeles
1918 – The weekly U.S. Army newspaper Stars & Stripes begins publication
1920 – Swiss men vote against women having the right to vote
1922 – U. S. President Harding introduces the first radio set in the White House
1924 – The first state execution in the U. S. by gas chamber takes place in Nevada
1926 – Sean O’Casey’s play Plough & Stars opens at Abbey Theater Dublin
1930 – Benny Mereoff hits #1 with “Happy Days Are Here Again”
1932 – John Williams born, American composer and conductor
1942 – Terry Melcher born, American musician- songwriter, producer for The Byrds and The Beach Boys, son of Doris Day
1946 – The first portion of the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, the first serious challenge to the popularity of the Authorized King James Version, is published
1946 – Adolfo De La Parra born, musician ‘Canned Heat’
1948 – The formal creation of the Korean People’s Army of North Korea is announced
1949 – Cardinal Mindszenty of Hungary, outspoken activist against political oppression and lack of religious freedom under the Communist regime, is sentenced to life imprisonment for treason; despite international outcry, the Cardinal remained in prison until 1956, when the short-lived reformist government took over; as Soviet tanks rolled into Budapest, Mindszenty took refuge in the U.S. embassy, staying inside the embassy grounds until 1971 when he was recalled by the Vatican and settled in Vienna, where he remained in exile until his death in 1975
1950 – The Stasi, East Germany’s effective and oppressive secret police/intelligence agency, is established
1955 – John Grisham born, American attorney-turned-best-selling author

1962 – Charonne massacre: 9 trade unionists at a peaceful anti-OAS demonstration are killed by French police directed by Nazi collaborator Maurice Papon, then chief of the Paris Prefecture of Police. The previous October, police had shot and shoved peacefully demonstrating Algerian French citizens into the Siene to drown, while detaining others who were beaten and tortured by the Prefecture’s infamous ‘welcoming committee’
1963 – Travel, financial and commercial transactions by United States citizens to Cuba are made illegal by the John F. Kennedy administration
1964 – Representative Martha Griffiths (D-MI) makes an address to the House which helps sway votes to add civil rights protection for women to the 1964 Civil Rights Act

1965 – The Supremes release “Stop In the Name of Love”
1968 – Black students at South Carolina State University in Orangeburg SC , after protesting racial segregation at the town’s only bowling alley, are attacked on campus by SC Highway Patrolmen; 3 students are killed and 27 injured
1971 – The NASDAQ stock market index opens for the first time
1971 – South Vietnamese ground troops launch an incursion into the neighboring country of Laos to cut off the Ho Chi Minh trail and stop communist infiltration
1974 – After 84 days in space, the crew of Skylab 4, the last crew to visit American space station Skylab, returns to Earth
1976 – Taxi Driver, directed by Martin Scorsese, starring Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster, is released
1978 – Proceedings of the United States Senate are broadcast on radio for the first time
1983 – The Melbourne dust storm hits Australia’s second largest city during the worst drought on record on a day of severe weather conditions; a 320 metres (1,050 ft) deep dust cloud envelops the city, turning day to night
1984 – The Olympic Winter Games open in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
1993 – General Motors sues NBC after Dateline NBC allegedly rigs two crashes to demonstrate that some GM pickups can easily catch fire if hit in certain places. NBC settles the lawsuit the next day
1996 – The U.S. Congress passes the Communications Decency Act, called by some legislators the “Great Internet Sex Panic Act of 1995”; the first notable attempt to regulate pornography on the Internet, its anti-indecency provisions are struck down in 1997 by the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the landmark cyberlaw case Reno v ACLU
2002 – Winter Olympics open in Salt Lake City UT
2010 – A freak storm in the Hindu Kush mountains of Afghanistan triggers a series of at least 36 avalanches, burying over two miles of road, killing at least 172 people and trapping over 2,000 travelers
2013 – A blizzard disrupts transportation and leaves hundreds of thousands of people without electricity in the Northeastern United States and parts of Canada
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Visuals
- Kites flying
- BSA Logo
- International flags
- White Monuments of Vladimir and Suzdal
- Leiden University
- Queen Elizabeth I and Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex
- Daniel Bernoulli and no mathematicians quote
- John Ruskin and property of the poor quote
- Jules Verne and science mistakes quote
- Kate Chopin and belong only to herself quote
- The Blue Horses by Franz Marc
- John Grisham and burn a man’s pickup quote
- Martha Griffiths and all I want quote
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Well I am going to Anna Maria Island for dinner tonight. I was going to the beach, but the rain has altered the plans, it is also known as AMI. A beautiful place to be. It has beach white sand very much like Aruba.
Hey Russell – sounds great!
I will probably be having soup right here at home – the perfect food for cool damp weather, and I don’t have to risk life and limb among L.A. drivers who are clueless about how to drive on wet streets.