ON THIS DAY: March 18, 2018

March 18th is

Awkward Moments Day

Forgive Mom & Dad Day

Oatmeal Lace Cookie Day

National Biodiesel Day

Sloppy Joe Day

 

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MORE! Margaret Tucker, Bonnie Blair and Kate Millet, click

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Hinduism – Ugadi/Ugaadi/Yugadi/Gudi Padwa/Chetti Chand – the new year for some sects of Hindus, is celebrated in many parts of India and in Mauritius

Aruba – National Anthem & Flag Day

Comoros – Sheikh Al Maarouf Day
(Death anniversary of president)

Mongolia – Soldier’s Day

Republic of the Congo – Marien Ngouabi Day
(president 1969 to assassination March 18, 1977)

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On This Day in HISTORY

37 – The Roman Senate annuls Tiberius’ will and proclaims Caligula emperor, whose excesses are so terrible he will be assassinated four years later



633 – Abu Bakr, first Caliph of the Rashidun Caliphate, crushes the rebellion of Arab tribes in the Arabian Peninsula during the Ridda Wars, uniting the tribes under his central authority

1123 – The first Latern Council (9th ecumenical council) opens in Rome

1190 – Crusaders kill 57 Jews in Bury St. Edmonds, England

1241 – Mongols overwhelm Kraków and plunder it in Mongol’s 1st invasion of Poland

1314 – Jacques de Molay, 23rd and final Grand Master of the Knights Templar, is burned at the stake, after being tortured into a confession which he retracts



1532 – The English parliament bans payments by the English church to Rome

1541 – Hernando de Soto observes the first recorded flood of the Mississippi River



1608 – Susenyos is formally crowned Emperor of Ethiopia; there is a brief period during his reign that Roman Catholicism becomes the state religion

1634 – Madame de La Fayette born, French author; she published La Princesse de Clèves, her most famous work, anonymously, one of the earliest French novels, and possibly France’s first historical novel



1673 – Lord Berkley sells his half of New Jersey to the Quakers

1692 – William Penn is deprived of his governing powers

1733 – Friedrich Nicolai born, German author; leader of the German Enlightenment

1813 – David Melville patents the gas streetlight

1818 – The U.S. Congress approves the first pensions for government service

1834 – The first railroad tunnel in the U.S. is completed, in Pennsylvania

1834 – Six farm labourers from Tolpuddle, Dorset, England are sentenced to be transported to Australia for forming a trade union

1835 – Charles Darwin leaves Santiago Chile on his way to Portillo Pass



1846 – Kicking Bear, aka Matȟó Wanáȟtaka, born, a chief of the Miniconjou Lakota Sioux, who fought in several battles with his brother Flying Hawk, and first cousin Crazy Horse, including the Battle of the Greasy Grass

1848 – Nathanael Herreshoff born, American naval architect, innovative sailboat and racing yacht designer; his America’s Cup defenders are unbeaten between 1893-1920


Up left: Constitution  Right: Grayling  Left: Nathanael Herreshoff 


1850 – Henry Wells and William Fargo found American Express

1858 – Rudolf Diesel born, German thermal engineer, inventor of the internal combustion engine

1863 – Women riot in Salisbury North Carolina, protesting lack of flour and salt in the Confederacy

1865 – The Congress of the Confederate States of America adjourns for the last time

1869 – Neville Chamberlain born, British Conservative PM (1937-1940)

1870 – Agnes Sime Baxter born, Canadian mathematician; in 1891, along with her bachelor’s degree from Dalhousie University, she received the Sir William Young Medal for highest standing in mathematics and mathematical physics; and completed her master’s degree in 1892, then held a fellowship at Cornell University (1892-1894); she became the second Canadian woman to receive a Ph.D. in mathematics



1881 – Barnum and Bailey’s Greatest Show on Earth opens in Madison Square Gardens

1891 – Britain is linked to the continent of Europe by telephone

1891 – Margaret Culkin Banning born, besting-selling novelist, Catholic moralist, but advocate for women to have work of their own in addition to their family responsibilities ; The First Woman, Women for Defense and The Women of the Family



1891 – Alice Cullen born, Scottish Labour Party MP; first Roman Catholic woman MP in the UK (1948-1969), for Glasgow Gorbals



1899 – Phoebe, a moon of the planet Saturn, is discovered

1902 – In Turkey, the Sultan grants a German syndicate the first concession to access Baghdad by rail

1903 – France dissolves all French Catholic religious orders after the Pope refuses to accept bishops appointed by the Republic, and excommunicates all  French deputies when France threatens to break off relations with the Vatican (In 1901, France passed the Associations Act, outlawing religious orders or any of their members from teaching anywhere in France without government permission. Most French towns had only Catholic schools. The Republic also dissolved the Assumptionists in 1901, a vocally anti-Republican order)

1904 – Margaret Tucker born, Aboriginal rights activist, a founding member of the Australian Aborigines’ League, founder of the United Council of Aboriginal and Islander Women; first indigenous appointee to the Victorian Aborigines Welfare Board; author of If Everybody Cared



1906 – In Morocco, France and Germany are in a deadlock at the Algeciras Conference

1909 – Einar Dessau of Denmark uses a short wave transmitter to become the first person to broadcast as a “ham” radio operator

1910 – The Pipe of Desire, by composer Frederick Shepherd Converse and librettist George Edward Barton, becomes the first opera by Americans to be performed at New York’s Metropolitan Opera

1911 – Theodore Roosevelt opens the Roosevelt Dam in Arizona, the largest dam in the U.S. at the time



1911 – North Dakota enacts a hail insurance law

1913 – Greek King George I is killed by an assassin; Constantine I succeeds him

1917 – The Germans sink the U.S. ships, City of Memphis, Vigilante and the Illinois, without any warning

1919 – The Order of DeMolay is established in Kansas City, a fraternal organization for men ages 12 to 21

1920 – Greece adopts the Gregorian calendar

1921 – Poland is enlarged with the second Peace of Riga

1922 – Mohandas K. Gandhi is sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience in India, but serves only 2 years of the sentence

1922 – The first Bat Mitzvah is held in the United States for Judith Kaplan, daughter of Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan

1925 – “Tea for Two” is recorded by Binnie Hale and the Palace Theater Orchestra



1931 – Schick Inc. markets the first electric shaver

1933 – Unita Z. Blackwell born, civil rights activist and politician; project director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) for voter registration drives; in 1965, she filed suit, Blackwell v. Issaquena County Board of Education, after the principal suspended over 300 black children, including her son, for wearing SNCC pins which showed black and white hands clasping; in the suit, she also asked the school district to desegregate their schools per Brown v. Board of Education in 1954; the U.S. District Court ruled that students wearing the pins was disruptive, but the school district must desegregate, and the ruling was upheld on appeal, leading to one of the first desegregation plans in Mississippi; in 1976, she was elected mayor of Mayerville, Mississippi, and held the office until 2001, the first African American woman to be a mayor in the state of Mississippi



1938 – Mexico takes control of all foreign-owned oil properties on its soil

1938 – Because of growing national concern over the spread of syphilis, New York state begins requiring serological blood tests of pregnant women – but not the fathers

1940 – Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini hold a meeting at the Brenner Pass; the Italian dictator agrees to join in Germany’s war against France and Britain

1942 – The third military draft begins in the U.S. because of World War II

1942 – Kathleen Collins born, African American playwright, civil rights activist, and pioneering director of films centered on black stories, including Losing Ground, the first feature-length drama directed by a black American woman, which won First Prize at the Figueroa International Film Festival in Portugal, but was unable to get large-scale exhibition in the U.S.; thanks to the efforts of her daughter, Collins’ Losing Ground was restored and re-issued in 2015, and had its first theatrical release at the Film Society of Lincoln Center in NY City



1942 – President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs an executive order authorizing the War Relocation Authority, which is in charge of interning Japanese-Americans

1948 – France, Great Britain, and Benelux sign the Treaty of Brussels

1949 – The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is ratified

1950 – Linda Partridge born, British geneticist whose field is the biology and genetics of aging and age-related diseases; founding director of the Max Planck Institute for the Biology of Aging; a Fellow of the Royal Society since 1996, and elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2004



1952 – In Philadelphia PA, the first plastic lenses are fitted for a cataract patient

1954 – RKO Pictures is sold for $23,489,478, becoming the first motion picture studio to be owned by a single individual, Howard Hughes

1959 – U.S. President Eisenhower signs the Hawaii statehood bill

1962 – France and Algerian rebels agree to a truce

1963 – France performs an underground nuclear test in Algeria

1963 – The U.S. Supreme Court hands down the Miranda decision concerning legal counsel for defendants

1964 – Bonnie Blair born, speed skater, one of the most successful Winter Olympians in U.S. history, 5 time gold medalist



1965 – Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov becomes the first man to spacewalk when he left the Voskhod II space capsule while in orbit around the Earth; he is outside the spacecraft for about 20 minutes

1966 – The government of Indonesia is formed by General Suharto

1968 – The U.S. Congress repeals the requirement for a gold reserve

1969 – U.S. President Nixon authorizes Operation Menue, the ‘secret’ bombing of Cambodia

1970 – The U.S. Postal Service has its first strike by postal workers

1970 – Queen Latifah born as Dana Owens, American rapper, singer-songwriter, actress and producer, long considered one of hip-hops pioneering feminists, and recipient of two NAACP Image Awards



1974 – Most of the Arab oil-producing nations end their five-month embargo against the United States, Europe and Japan

1975 – Saigon abandons most of the Central Highlands of Vietnam to Hanoi

1975 – The Kurds end their fight against Iraq

1977 – Vietnam turns over an MIA to a U.S. delegation

1979 – American feminist Kate Millet travels in Iran with Canadian journalist Sophie Keir, under the auspices of the Committee for Artistic and Intellectual Freedom, an organization Millet helped found seven years earlier, concerned for the rights of Iranian women. Under the Ayatollah Khomeini, the government had abolished coeducational schools, revoked a law allowing wives to divorce their husbands, and warned working women to return to the veil in public or lose their jobs. “I was there as a friend,” Millet explains. “There was never a question of me organizing anything. I don’t even speak Farsi.” On March 8, a small rally planned for International Women’s Day at the gates of Tehran University, unexpectedly attracts thousands of women, surging into the streets. More demonstrations follow, one filling Tehran’s Freedom Square with 20,000 women; some men tried to attack the women with knives and acid, while other men linked arms struggling to form a protective barrier. Iranian authorities arrest Millet and Keir on March 17, refusing to say what charges against them are, and holding them overnight under armed guard at the immigration center, awaiting deportation. The next day, they are put on a plane, but not told where they were going. After takeoff, their passports are returned, but stamped as barred from entering Iran again. The flight’s destination turned out to be Paris. This was the largest women’s uprising in Iran’s history, but it was swiftly crushed by the new regime



1981 – The U.S. discloses that biological weapons were tested in Texas in 1966

1986 – The U.S. Treasury Department announces that a clear, polyester thread will be woven into bills in an effort to thwart counterfeiters

1987 – The U.S. performs nuclear tests at a Nevada test site

1990 – Thirteen paintings, valued at $100 million, are stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, the largest art robbery in history

1989 – A 4,400-year-old mummy is discovered at the Pyramid of Cheops in Egypt

1990 – The first free elections take place in East Germany

1992 – The ‘Queen of Mean’ hotelier Leona Hemsley, is sentenced to a 4-year prison term for tax evasion

2000 – Taiwan ends more than a half century of Nationalist Party rule by electing opposition leader Chen Shui-bian president

2003 – China’s new president, Hu Jintao, says his country must deepen reforms and raise living standards of workers and farmers



2010 – President Barack Obama signs into law a $38 billion jobs bill containing a modest mix of tax breaks and spending to encourage private sector hiring

2011 – President Obama says that unless Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi halts all military attacks on civilians, the U.S. will join other nations in launching military action against him

2014 – Russian President Vladimir Putin signs a treaty of accession with the “Republic of Crimea” which took over the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, initiating a referendum which was claimed to showing majority support for joining Russia; the referendum results are disputed by Ukraine and most of the international community

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About wordcloud9

Nona Blyth Cloud has lived and worked in the Los Angeles area for over 50 years, spending much of that time commuting on the 405 Freeway. After Hollywood failed to appreciate her genius for acting and directing, she began a second career managing non-profits, from which she has retired. Nona has now resumed writing whatever comes into her head, instead of reports and pleas for funding. She lives in a small house overrun by books with her wonderful husband.
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