August 3rd is
International Beer Day
Clean Your Floors Day
Grab Some Nuts Day
Watermelon Day
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MORE! Regina Jonas, Jesse Owens and Ana Kokkinos, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Australia – Adelaide: Woolly Mammoth Music Festival
El Salvador – San Salvador:
Fiesta de San Salvador (through Aug-6-2019)
Equatorial Guinea – Golpe de la Libertad
(Freedom Day)
Guinea-Bissau – Pidjiguiti Day
(Striking dockworkers massacred by police)
Japan – Akita: Kanto Festival (Candle-lit
Lantern pole balancing – through Aug-6-2019)
Niger – Féte Nationale de l’Arbre
(Arbor Day and Independence Day)
Scotland – Edinburgh Festival Fringe
(through Aug-26-2019)
Thailand – Bangkok: Phuket Por Tor Festival
(through Aug-30-2019)
Venezuela – National Guard Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
8 AD – Roman general and future emperor Tiberius defeats an Illyrian tribe, the Breuci of Sava Valley, part of the Bellum Batonianum, an Illyian revolt
70 – The fires which destroyed the Second Temple in Jerusalem are extinguished
1347 – Six burghers of the besieged French city of Calais surrender to Edward III of England, hoping to relieve the siege
The Burghers of Calais by Auguste Rodin – 1884
1492 – Christopher Columbus sets sail from Palos de la Frontera, Spain
1527 – First known letter from North America sent by explorer John Rut to Henry VIII via the trading vessels of the otherwise unknown Master Grube, returning from St. John’s, Newfoundland, to Plymouth, England
1546 – French printer Etienne Doled, accused of heresy, blasphemy and sedition, hanged AND burned at the stake for printing reformist literature
1596 – David Fabricus discovers light variation of Mira (first variable star)
1678 – Robert LaSalle builds first ship in America, the Griffin, on Lake Erie
The Griffin
1750 – Christopher Dock completed first known book of teaching methods, titled “A Simple and Thoroughly Prepared School Management”
1778 – The world-famous opera house, Tetra allays Scala, known as “La Scala,” opens in Milan, Italy; Premiere performance is Antonio Allier’s Europe riconosciuta
1801 – Joseph Paxton born, English gardener and architect, designer of The Crystal Palace for London’s Great Exhibition of 1851
1808 – Hamilton Fish born, American lawyer and politician, U.S. Secretary of State in Grant administration; developed concept of international arbitration during the negotiations with Great Britain over the sinking of Union ships by the Confederate naval vessel Alabama, built in British shipyards, allowed to sail to the South in spite of protests by the American Minister that it violated Britain’s proclaimed neutrality
1811 – Elisha Graves Otis born, American industrialist/inventor, Otis Elevator Company founder; inventor of a safety device to prevent elevators from falling if a hoist cable fails
1852 – Harvard wins first U.S. intercollegiate athletic event, the Harvard-Yale Boat Race
1855 – Henry Cuyler Bunner born, American novelist, short story writer and poet; The Tower of Babel
1859 – The American Dental Association is founded in Niagara Falls NY
1863 – Saratoga Race Course opens in Saratoga Springs NY
1873 – Inventor Andrew Hallidie successfully tests his cable car, making the first San Francisco cable car trip, traveling down Nob Hill on Clay Street to Kearney and back up
Clay Street Cable Car, 1887
1882 – Segundo Luis Moreno Andrade born, Ecuadoran composer and folklorist
1882 – US Congress passes an Immigration Act, with a 50¢ tax to be levied on all aliens landing at U.S. ports. Exclusionary criteria was instituted: any apparent convicts, lunatics, idiots or those unable to take care of themselves are denied entrance. In May, 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act had already totally banned Chinese immigration for 10 years
1887 – Rupert Brooke born, British WWI poet whose poems expressed the idealism felt by many at the beginning of the war; he died aboard a French hospital ship moored off the Aegean coast of Greece in 1915, from sepsis caused by an infected mosquito bite
1900 – Firestone Tire & Rubber Company founded
1900 – Ernie Pyle born, American notable WWII war correspondent, killed on Iwo Jima Island by Japanese machine-gun fire in April, 1945
1902 – Regina Jonas in Germany, first woman ordained as a rabbi; she spent two years at the Theresienstadt concentration camp, where she continued teaching and holding services. She also met the newly-arrived prisoners to help them recover from shock and disorientation. She was transferred to Auschwitz in October, 1944, and killed there. The date of her death is uncertain
1905 – Maggie Kuhn born, American activist, founder of the Gray Panthers, advocate for human rights, social and economic justice, nursing home reform and increased understanding of mental health issues
1905 – Dolores del Rio born, Mexican actress and film star, regarded as the first Latin American crossover star in Hollywood in the 1920s and 1930s. After her busy career in the U.S. began to decline, she returned to Mexico and became one of the most important women in the Golden Age of Mexican cinema in the 1940s and 1950s. In 1966, she was the co-founder with Felipe Garcia Beraza of the Society for the Protection of the Artistic Treasures of Mexico, which worked to protect the nation’s buildings, paintings, and other works of artistic and cultural significance. In 1972, she was one of the founders of Rosa Mexicano, which ran a day nursery for the children of members of the Mexican Actor’s Guild, and she served as the group’s first president (1970-1981), and a major fundraiser. After her death, the day nursery was named Estancia Infantil Dolores del Río (The Dolores del Río Day Nursery), and is still in operation. In 1972, she was a founder of the Festival Cervantino in Guanajuato, and made a series of television commercials for UNICEF shown throughout Latin America. In 1978, she was jointly honored by the Mexican American Institute of Cultural Relations and the White House as a cultural ambassador of Mexico in the United States
1907 – Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis fines Standard Oil of Indiana $29.4 million for illegal rebates to freight carriers, but conviction and fine are reversed on appeal
1914 – WWI: Germany declares war on France, Romania declares its neutrality; and the 52-year-old British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey said, “The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.”
1920 – P. D. James born, British author and life peer in the House of Lords; best known for her Adam Dalgliesh detective series, but she also ventured into both historical fiction with Death at Pemberly, and dystopian fiction with The Children of Men
1926 – Tony Bennett born, American singer; known for I Left My Heart in San Francisco
1928 – Cécile Aubry, French author, actress, screenwriter, and TV director; adapted her children’s book series Poly and and Belle et Sébastien for television
1933 – First Mickey Mouse Watch introduced, priced at $2.75
1936 – U.S. State Department warns Americans to leave Spain because of civil war
1936 – Jesse Owens wins the first of his four Olympic gold medals in Berlin
1941 – Martha Stewart born, American founder of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, a communications, publishing and merchandising empire
1943 – General George S. Patton slaps around a private in a “psychoneurosis anxiety state,” at an army hospital in Sicily, accusing him of cowardice; then does it to another soldier in shell shock on August 10; when informed, Eisenhower sends him a private reprimand and transfers most of Patton’s 7th Army combat forces to Lt. General Mark W. Clark for the invasion of mainland Italy, and insists Patton apologize
1946 – Cyprian Mpho Shilakoe born, South African artist best known for his etchings, prints and wooden sculptures. He was killed in an automobile accident in 1972
1948 – Whittaker Chambers accuses Alger Hiss of being a communist spy for the USSR
1949 – Sue Slipman born, British civil, human and women’s rights activist; executive member of the National Council for Civil Liberties (1977-1979); founding member of the Social Democratic Party (1981); Director of the National Council for One Parent Families (1986-1995); a staunch advocate for women, especially single parents, she was a member of the Working Group on Women’s Issues to the Secretary of State for Employment (1992-1998)
1953 – Marlene Dumas born, South African artist, whose uses themes of race, sexuality, guilt, violence and tenderness in her paintings. In 1985, she became one of three living women artists whose work had sold for over $1 million USD at that time
1957 – Kate Wilkinson born, New Zealand lawyer and politician, Commissioner of the Envrionment Court since 2015; Member of NZ Parliament (2005-2014); Minister of: Food Safety (2008-2013), Conservation (2010-2013), and Labour (2008-2012)
1958 – USS Nautilus becomes the first submarine to cross the North Pole while submerged underwater
1958 – Lindsey Hilsum born, English television journalist and writer; International Editor for Channel 4 News, and regular contributor to the Sunday Times, The Observer, The Guardian, The New Statesman, and Granta; recipient of the 2017 Patron’s Medal of the Royal Geographical Society
1958 – The Billboard ‘Hot 100’ is launched
1958 – Ana Kokkinos born, Australian film and television director and screenwriter; her second short film, Only the Brave, won several awards; her first feature film, Head On (1998), won Best First Feature at San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival; other feature films include The Book of Revelation and Blessed
1960 – Niger becomes independent from France
1963 – The Beach Boys release Surfer Girl, Brian Wilson’s first song
1968 – The Doors “Hello I Love You” hits #1 in the U.S. singles chart
1968 – Opening of the first Newport Pop Festival in Costa Mesa California; the first music concert to have more than 100,000 paid attendees
1971 – Paul McCartney announces formation of his band Wings
1972 – U.S. Senate ratifies Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty
1977 – Tandy unveils the TRS-80, pioneering mass-produced PC, for $600
1981 – The PATCO strike: the air traffic controllers go on strike. President Reagan says he will fire them
1984 – Mary Lou Retton’s perfect 10 vault wins gold at L.A. Summer Olympics
1985 – Tears for Fears Shout is the #1 U.S. single
1987 – The Iran-Contra congressional hearings end; none of the 29 witnesses tie President Reagan directly to the diversion of arms-sales profits to Nicaraguan rebels
1992 – U.S. Senate votes to restrict and eventually end nuclear weapons testing
1996 – Los Del Rio Macarena starts a 14 week run as #1 on the U.S. singles chart
2004 – NASA launches Messenger, which will send back 270,000 pictures of Mercury
2009 – Bolivia becomes first South American country to declare right of indigenous people to govern themselves
2015 – Delta, American and United Airlines announce they will no longer transport big-game trophies amidst the on-going public outcry over the killing of Cecil, a protected lion in Zimbabwe in July by an American hunter
2018 – U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw rejected the Trump administration’s proposal that the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) do the legwork to locate migrant parents who were deported from the United States without their children. “For every parent that is not located, there will be a permanently orphaned child, and that is 100 percent the responsibility of the administration,” said Judge Sabraw, who was appointed by former President George W. Bush. The whereabouts of about 500 parents who were separated from their children at the border remains unknown
Uncertain future – What happens to the children separated from their parents?
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