April 9th is
Global Day to End Child Sexual Abuse *
Appomattox Day *
Jenkin’s Ear Day *
Winston Churchill Day *
Cherish an Antique Day
Chinese Almond Cookie Day
National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day *
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MORE! James Cook, Florence Price, and Bob Hope, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Christianity – Orthodox Easter Monday
Egypt –Shan El-Nessim
(Spring festival)
Georgia –
Independence/Restoration Day
Iraq – Baghdad Liberation Day
Kiribati – National Health Day
Kosovo – Dita e Kushtetutës
(Constitution day)
Philippines – Araw ng Kagitingan
(Day of Valor)
Tunisia – Martyrs’ Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
190 AD – As the coalition against him advances, Chancellor and general Dong Zhuo (who had seized power after the death of Emperor Ling) orders his soldiers to ransack and raze the capital city of Luoyang as he retreats, moving the court to the more defensible city of Chang’an in western China
1413 – Henry V is crowned King of England at age 27
1667 – Under the leadership of painter Charles Le Brun and Louis XIV’s chief minister Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture holds the first public art exhibition, at the Palais-Royale in Paris
1731 – Jenkin’s Ear Day * commemorates the boarding and plundering of the British ship Rebecca by Spanish guardacosta, who suspected the British were smuggling goods, in the waters off Jamaica. They also cut off an ear of English master mariner Robert Jenkins, frequently cited during debate in the House of Commons in 1738, and used as a pretext for Britain declaring war on Spain in 1739 over a lucrative asiento contract (permission to sell slaves in Spanish-held America); dubbed by Thomas Carlyle as “The War of Jenkin’s Ear”
1768 – Colonial merchant John Hancock refuses to allow two British customs agents to go below deck on his ship, sometimes cited as the first physical act of resistance to British authority in the American colonies. His ship, the Liberty, suspected of smuggling, would be seized the following June, but the case is unproven and dismissed
1770 – Captain James Cook’s Endeavour, sailing north along the Australian coast, enters a large inlet; the voyagers make first landing on the continent, at what is now Botany Bay
1806 – Isambard Brunel born, British engineer; first transatlantic steamer
1816 – The African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church is organized in Philadelphia by Richard Allen, who becomes its first bishop, because black Methodists are discriminated against by white Methodist churches
1821 – Charles Baudelaire born, French poet and translator
Reversibility, poem by Charles Baudelaire
1827 – Maria Susanna Cummins born, American author; The Lamplighter
1833 – The Peterborough Town Library is founded at a town hall meeting in Peterborough, New Hampshire, the oldest free public library supported by taxes in the U.S.
1837 – Florence Smith Price born, African-American classical composer, possibly the first black woman recognized as a symphonic composer in the United States; she left a large body of work, including compositions for orchestra, pianoforte and organ, chamber music, choral and solo vocal pieces and arrangements of spirituals
1838 – The British National Gallery re-opens in its new dedicated building in London’s Trafalgar Square; it was originally founded in 1724 when the British government bought 38 paintings and his townhouse from the heirs of John Julius Angerstein, and expanded its collection with additional purchases and private donations, quickly outgrowing the cramped quarters of Angerstein’s former home
1865 – Appomattox Day * – Surrounded at Appomattox Court House, with no escape, Confederate General Robert E. Lee, in spotless full dress uniform, surrenders to rumpled and mud-scattered Union General Ulysses S. Grant, who silences his men’s victory celebration, saying, “The war is over. The Rebels are our countrymen again.”
1866 – U.S. Congress overturns President Andrew Johnson’s veto of the Civil Rights Bill
1869 – The Hudson Bay Company cedes its territory to Canada
1870 – The American Anti-Slavery Society dissolves
1872 – Leon Blum born, French politician; first Socialist and Jewish premier of France
1888 – Sol Hurok born in Russia, American impresario; helped to popularize classical music and ballet in the U.S.
1894 – First performance of Anton Bruckner’s 5th Symphony in B, in Graz, Austria
1898 – Paul Robeson born, American singer, actor and Civil Rights and trade union activist; founder of the American Crusade Against Lynching in 1946, launched on the anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation; blacklisted during the McCarthy era for being a communist sympathizer because of his membership in two organizations which were on the Attorney General’s List of Subversive Organizations – when questioned by the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, he answered, “Some of the most brilliant and distinguished Americans are about to go to jail for the failure to answer that question, and I am going to join them, if necessary.”
1903 – Gregory Pincus born, American scientist, makes discoveries that lead to developing the first birth-control pills
1905 – J. William Fulbright born, U.S. Senator (D-AR); introduced legislation in 1946 establishing the Fulbright Program, merit scholarships for international educational exchange, operating in over 160 countries
1909 – U.S. Congress passes Payne-Aldrich Act, raising some tariffs on imported goods
1909 – Robert Helpman CBE born, Australian ballet dancer, choreographer and theatre director; co-director of the Australian Ballet (1965-1976)
1914 – The World, the Flesh and the Devil, the first color film, is shown in London
1921 – Mary Jackson born, African American mathematician and aerospace engineer; NASA’s first black woman engineer
1923 – Sean O’Casey’s play Shadow of a Gunman premieres at Dublin’s Abbey Theatre
1923 – U.S. Supreme Court rules in Adkins v Children’s Hospital that the minimum wage law for women and children in the District of Columbia is unconstitutional
1928 – Eugene O’Neill’s play Lazarus Laughed premieres at the Pasadena Community Playhouse in Pasadena CA, one of the play’s few productions, since it calls for 151 actors
1928 – Tom Lehrer born, American singer-songwriter, pianist and mathematician; notable for clever satirical lyrics in songs like “Poisoning Pigeons in the Park,” “The Masochism Tango,” and “The Vatican Rag”
1928 – Mae West opens in the play she wrote for herself, Diamond Lil, her first Broadway success
1928 – The Turkish National Assembly passes an amendment to the Turkish Republic’s Constitution to omit all references to religion, including proclaiming Islam as the national religion, and changing the oath sworn by deputies of parliament to “in honor” instead of “before God”
1929 – Sharan Rani Backliwal born, Indian classical musician and scholar, known for her expertise on the sarod and her collection of over 300 15th to 19th century musical instruments
1929 – Paule Marshall born Valenza Pauline Burke, American author and poet, best known for her novel Brown Girl, Brownstones; went with Langston Hughes on a State Department-sponsored world cultural tour in 1965
1939 – On Easter Sunday, over 75,000 people gather on the Mall in Washington DC to hear famed contralto Marian Anderson give a free concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Anderson had originally been engaged to give a concert at DC’s Constitution Hall, managed by the Daughters of the American Revolution. When the DAR refuses to allow a black woman to perform there, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigns her DAR membership in protest, and writes about it on her newspaper column. Thousands more hear Anderson’s concert in a live national radio broadcast, and the story raises awareness of racial discrimination in America
1940 – Nazi Germany invades Denmark and Norway
1940 – Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra record “Six Lessons from Madame La Zonga”
1946 – Sara Parkin born, Scottish politician, originally with the UK Green Party (1976-1992), a savvy policy instigator and frequent spokesperson for the party, but resigned in 1992 over leadership issues within the party; co-founded the Forum for the Future, a sustainable development charity; currently involved with spreading sustainability education and literacy
1948 – Jaya Bhaduri Bachchan born, Indian actress and politician, reelected to her seat in parliament in 2012
1949 – The UN International Court of Justice holds Albania responsible for incidents in the Corfu Channel, awarding damages to Great Britain
1950 – Bob Hope makes his first national TV appearance in a Bob Hope special on NBC
1953 – TV Guide publishes its first issue
1953 – First 3-D movie opens, Warner Brothers’ House of Wax
1955 – Yamina Benguigui born, French film director and Socialist Party politician of Algerian descent; her father, a leader in the Algerian National Movement, became a political prisoner, but his opposition to her chosen profession led to an estrangement; she is known for films on gender issues in the North African immigrant community in France; Femmes d’Islam, Mémoires d’immigrés, l’héritage maghrébin; elected to the Paris city council representing the 20th arrondissement in 2008, and appointed as Junior Minister for French Nationals Abroad and Relations with La Francophonie (French-speaking countries worldwide) at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 2012; appointed as the French President’s representative for the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (OIF)
1955 – Joolz Denby born, British spoken-word artist, poet, novelist and tattoo artist; former punk scene bouncer; she organized Poetry in Motion, a local poetry out loud group, and originally gained attention as a touring punk performance poet
1957 – Composer Howard Hanson’s Song of Democracy debuts in Washington DC
1959 – NASA announces the first seven astronauts for Project Mercury
1963 – Winston Churchill Day * – By Act of Congress, Winston Churchill becomes the second foreign national to be granted Honorary United States Citizenship, bestowed by President Kennedy, represented at the ceremony by his son and grandson as he watched on television – he was 90 years old, had suffered multiple strokes and nearly deaf. The only previous recipient of this honor was the Marquis de Lafayette, and to date, there have been only eight honorees
1965 – The Beatles “Ticket to Ride” is released in the UK
1965 – The Peanuts comic strip characters make the cover of TIME magazine
1967 – The first Boeing 737-100 series makes its maiden flight
1968 – Ralph Abernathy elected head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
1969 – Bob Dylan’s album Nashville Skyline is released
1971 – Elton John’s album 11-17-70 is released
1977 – The Spanish Cabinet allows legalization of the Communist Party after it had been banned for 40 years
1981 – Irish hunger striker Bobby Sands, aged 27, imprisoned for an IRA bombing and shoot-out which wounded two police officers, wins a bi-election as a British Member of Parliament; he dies of starvation the following month, and the law is later changed to prevent prisoners from standing for election
1988 – President Reagan imposes harsher economic sanctions in Panama, attempting to oust Manuel Noriega from power, freezing Panamanian assets in the U.S. and prohibiting payments by all U.S. organizations to the Panamanian government
1989 – The March for Women’s Lives, a march initiated by the National Organization for Women, assembles 500,000 women in the nation’s capital to protest anti-abortion law cases pending in the Supreme Court which threaten reversal of the landmark Roe v Wade decision that legalized abortion
1990 – Billy Idol releases his single “Cradle of Love”
1992 – John Major becomes the UK’s Prime Minister after the Conservative party wins the most votes in British electoral history
1992 – U.S. Federal court finds Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega guilty of eight out of ten drug and racketeering charges
2003 – Baghdad falls to U.S. forces, ending the invasion of Iraq, but the city suffers serious damage to its infrastructure. There is widespread looting by Iraqi civilians, and arson destroys the National Library and the National Archives, which housed thousands of historic manuscripts, some dating back 7,000 years. Most of the animals in the Baghdad Zoo are killed and eaten, or die from lack of food or water, in spite of efforts by some zookeepers to save them
2006 – National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day * is proclaimed as an annual national day in the U.S.
2012 – The Lion King becomes the highest grossing Broadway show, overtaking The Phantom of the Opera
2013 – The French Senate approves a same-sex marriage bill
2013 – Global Day to End Child Sexual Abuse * is launched by The Innocence Revolution as a focal point for uniting organizations worldwide in a commitment to end child sexual abuse
2014 – Stuart Parkin is awarded the Millennium Technology Prize for his work on magnetic storage
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I LOVE TOM LEHRER!!
When my kid was little (about 6) he memorized “Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky” and would lip-sync it with the Lehrer record, complete with little Russki dance moves. Fabulous!
Me too! – My family wore out his record “An Evening Wasted With Tom Lehrer” and had to buy another copy.
To celebrate Tom Lerher’s 90th birthday, one of his greatest fans just posted a video this morning. How popular is Tom Lerher? this video has only been up a few hours and it it already over a thousand views.
Tom was told the word “orange” does not rhyme with anything. So he wrote a poem with a line that rhymes. This is making orange candy and a narration about Tom Lerher. This candy maker has a fan web site for Tom Lerher.
Thanks OS –
What a collection of Lehrer stuff he has!