December 22nd is

Date Nut Bread Day
Forefathers Day *
Be a Lover of Silence Day
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MORE! Jean Racine, Aya Takano and Barak Obama, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Macau – Dongzhi (Solstice)
Pakistan – Kalash Valleys: Chaumos
(harvest celebration – goat sacrifice)
Zimbabwe – National Unity Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
AD 69 – Emperor Vitellius is captured and murdered at the Gemonian stairs in Rome

Mort de Vitellius by Charles-Gustave Houez, 1874
244 – Diocletian born, a low-status Roman from Dalmatia who will rise from the ranks to become the Roman cavalry commander under Emperor Carus, and be proclaimed Emperor after Carus and his son Numerian are killed in battle in Persia
609 – Muhammad announces he was visited by the angel Gabriel, and received his first revelation from God, while praying in seclusion in Hira, a mountain cave
1639 – Jean Racine born, major French dramatist, known for his use of Classical themes, La Thébaïde, Iphigénie, Phèdre

1666 – Guru Gobind Singh born, Indian Sikh warrior, guru and poet
1696 – James Oglethorpe born, English general and politician, first Colonial Governor of Georgia
1723 – Carl Friedrich Abel born, German viol player and composer
1715 – James Stuart, the “Old Pretender” lands at Petershead after his exile in France
1769 –Forefathers’ Day * is celebrated in Plymouth, Massachusetts, for the first time
1775 – A Continental naval fleet is organized in the rebellious American colonies under the command of Ezek Hopkins
1807 – The Embargo Act, forbidding trade with European nations during the Napoleonic Wars, is passed by Congress, at the urging of President Thomas Jefferson in an attempt to stem violations of U.S. neutrality by American merchants, and push Great Britain and France toward making peace
1808 – Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in C minor is first performed, for Prince Lobkotwitz of Bohemia, Beethoven’s patron
1823 – Jean-Henri Fabre born, French naturalist, entomologist, botanist and author; noted for his Souvenirs Entomologiques, a series of texts on insects and arachnids, written in an engaging style very different from the usual dry prose of academics, drawing criticism from other scientists but popularizing entomology

1823 – Thomas W. Higginson born, American Unitarian minister, militant abolitionist, Union officer, and woman’s rights advocate who was a close friend and supporter of Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell; one of the ‘Secret Six’ who funded John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry; during the Civil War, he was a colonel in command of the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first federally authorized Union regiment of black freedmen (1862-1864); he became a correspondent of Emily Dickinson after she wrote to him about his “Letter to a Young Contributor” published in the April 1862 issue of Atlantic Monthly; Higginson was the author of Woman and Her Wishes (1853), and Army Life in a Black Regiment (1870)

1851 – India’s first freight train is operated in Roorkee, India
1853 – Teresa Carreño born, Venezuelan-American pianist-conductor-composer
1853 – Sarada Devi born, Indian mystic and spiritual consort of Saradamani Mukhopadhyay, who became the leader of the Ramakrishna movement after his death; she paved the way for Indian women to take up the monastic life

1856 –Frank B. Kellogg born, American statesman, co-author of the Kellogg-Briand Pact, officially called the 1928 General Treaty for Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy, for which he was awarded the 1929 Nobel Peace Prize
1858 – Giacomo Puccini born, Italian opera composer
1864 – During the American Civil War, Union General William T. Sherman sent a message to President Lincoln from Georgia, which read, “I beg to present you as a Christmas gift the city of Savannah”
1869 – Edwin Arlington Robinson born, American poet, winner of three Pulitzers

1876 – Filippo Tommaso Marinetti born in Egypt; Italian editor, art theorist, poet and founder of the Futurist movement, an artistic and social movement emphasizing speed, technology, youth and violence; he was one of the first affiliates of the Italian Fascist Party, and co-author of the Fascist Manifesto, but he later opposed some of its policies, walking out of the 1920 Fascist Party Congress in disgust; attacked traditional Italian cooking, especially pasta, claiming it caused lassitude, pessimism and lack of virility
1877 – The “American Bicycling Journal” goes on sale for the first time
1883 – Edgard Varèse born, French-American composer
1887 – Srinivasa Ramanujan born, Indian math prodigy; with almost no formal training, he made substantial contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions, and solutions to mathematical problems considered to be unsolvable
1891 – Asteroid 323 Brucia is the first asteroid discovered using photography
1894 – The United States Golf Association is formed in New York City
1894 – French army officer Alfred Dreyfus is convicted of treason in a court-martial that triggered worldwide charges of anti-Semitism. Dreyfus is eventually vindicated
1895 – German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen made the first X-ray, of his wife’s hand
1905 – Kenneth Rexroth born, American poet

1910 – U.S. Postal savings stamps are issued for the first time, but will be discontinued in 1914
1926 – Roberta Leigh born as Rita Lewin, British author of children’s stories, science fiction, romance novels and murder mysteries; also an artist, composer and television producer; screenwriter for Space Patrol and Paul Starr, two marionette space adventure series during the 1960s, and The Solarnauts, a live-action scifi series
1937 – The Lincoln Tunnel opens to traffic in New York City
1939 – Gloria Jacobs, aged 17, becomes the first girl to hold a world pistol record when her shooting earns 299 out of a possible 300 points
1944 – During the Battle of the Bulge, Germany demands the Americans surrender at Bastogne, Belgium; Brigadier Gen. Anthony C. McAuliffe reportedly replied: “Nuts!”
1944 – Dame Mary Archer born, British chemist and scientist, who specialized in solar power conversion; chair of the British National Energy Foundation (1988-2000); president of the UK Solar Energy Society (UK-ISES)
1945 –Frances Lannon born, British historian and academic specializing in Spanish history; a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society; appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE – 2016); Women and Images of Women in the Spanish Civil War, Privilege, Persecution, and Prophecy: the Catholic Church in Spain
1945 – Diane Sawyer born, American TV journalist; CBS reporter and correspondent (1978-1981); 60 Minutes correspondent (1984-1989); co-anchor of Good Morning America (1999-2009) and Primetime newsmagazine (1989-1998 and since 2000); 2009 Peabody Award for “A Hidden America: Children of the Mountains” and inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1997

1949 – Brothers Maurice and Robin Gibb born, British singers-songwriters-producers, the Bee Gees
1956 – At the Columbus Zoo in Ohio, Colo is born, the first gorilla born in captivity

1964 – The first test flight of the SR-71 (Blackbird) takes place at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California

1965 – In the United Kingdom, a 70 mph speed limit is applied to all rural roads including motorways for the first time
1968 – Cultural Revolution: the People’s Daily posts the instructions of Mao Zedong that “The intellectual youth must go to the country, and will be educated from living in rural poverty.”
1974 – Grande Comore, Anjouan and Mohéli vote to become the independent nation of Comoros, but the island of Mayotte remains under French administration
1976 – Aya Takano born, Japanese Superflat and manga artist, scifi essayist; her female figure are often androgynous, floating through alternate realities

1978 – The pivotal Third Plenum of the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party of China is held in Beijing, with Deng Xiaoping reversing Mao-era policies to pursue a program for Chinese economic reform
1989 – Romania’s hard-line Communist ruler, Nicolae Ceausescu, is overthrown in a popular uprising which began on December 16th
1990 – Lech Wałęsa was sworn in as Poland’s first popularly elected president
2001 – Hamid Karzai assumes his position as head of the post-Taliban government in Afghanistan, along with 30 other Afghans, including two women, as part of the interim government
2005 – Astronomers announce the discovery of two more rings encircling planet Uranus
2010 – President Barack Obama signs the law repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” allowing gays for the first time in history to serve openly in America’s military

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When I first started working in NY City (1970) there was a chain-store coffee house that was named, I think, “Chock Full of Nuts” after the brand of coffee. They served coffee and sandwiches, but the sandwiches were all pre-prepared and were kept under the counter wrapped up. Tuna, cheese, and something else were 60 cents. For 70 cents you could get date nut bread with cream cheese. It was the best food in the world.
So many of our good memories are connected to food, aren’t they?
There’a a place in Scottsdale AZ called the Sugar Bowl, a ice cream parlor with a “ladies’ lunch” type menu, which has been there pretty much unchanged since the 1950s. One of their popular options is a fresh fruit salad with date nut bread, made on the premises, which is still the best date nut bread I’ve ever tasted.