August 23rd is
International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade & its Abolition *
Ride the Wind Day *
Spongecake Day
Valentino Day *
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MORE! Nazik Al-Malaika, Frank Capra and Halimah Yacob, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Australia – Daffodil Day Appeal
(National Fundraiser for Cancer Research)
European Union/Lithuania – Black Ribbon Day (for victims of totalitarianism)
Iran – National Physicians Day
Malaysia – Kuala Lumpur:
Kuala Lumpur Photography Festival
Mexico – Mexico City:
Macabro International Horror Film Festival
Romania –Liberation from Fascism Day
Russia – Battle of Kursk Day
Swaziland – Umhlanga Day
(Reed Dance Ceremony for Unmarried Girls)
Ukraine – National Flag Day
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On This Day in HISTORY
30 BC – After invading Egypt, Octavian executes Caesarion, Cleopatra’s son by Julius Caesar, and Marcus Antonius Antyllus, Mark Antony’s eldest son
AD 79 – Mount Vesuvius begins stirring, on the feast day of Vulcan, the Roman god of fire, metalworking and volcanoes
Hand-colored etching by Peter Fabris, circa 1760: a plate in William Hamilton’s Campi Phlegraei
1244 – Siege of Jerusalem: The city’s citadel, the Tower of David, surrenders to the Sunni Muslim Khwarezmian Empire
1305 – Sir William Wallace is executed for treason at Smithfield in London
1524 – François Hotman born, French Protestant lawyer and legal scholar, writer, humanist, opposed absolute monarchy, labeled “one of the first modern revolutionaries”
1614 – University of Groningen is established in the Dutch Republic
1628 – George Villiers, first Duke of Buckingham, stabbed to death by John Felton
1754 – French King Louis XVI born, destined to be sentenced to the guillotine and executed during the French Revolution
1769 – Georges Cuvier born, French major figure in natural sciences, zoologist and pioneer in comparative anatomy and vertebrate paleontology; early proponent of catastrophism in geology, which his work helped establish extinction as fact
1817 – Emily Chubbuck Judson born, author and poet under pen-names Fanny Forrester and Emily Judson; married missionary and went to Burma
1838 – First graduating class from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, South Hadley MA, one of the earliest colleges for women
1843 – Lillie Hitchcock Coit born, ‘Firebelle Lil’ was a wealthy socialite fascinated by firefighting, who became a mascot as a teen, and then an honorary member of Engine Company No. 5, often riding along to fires, sometimes scandalously wearing trousers, or when the engine company was in a parade; she left one-third of her estate to the City of San Francisco, which used the bequest to build the landmark Coit Tower, and place a statue of three firefighters in Washington Square Park
1847 – Sarah Frances Whiting born, American physicist, astronomer and first professor of physics at Wellesley College (1876-1916); Whiting was quick to explore the newest techniques being applied to astronomy, and became the first director of the college’s Whitin Observatory. Annie Jump Cannon was among her notable students, one of the most effective Harvard “computers,” a group of women who worked on completing the Henry Draper Catalogue, an ambitious project to map and define every star in the sky to a photographic magnitude of around 9. Whiting also wrote numerous articles for Popular Astronomy, and became a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1883
1849 – William Ernest Henley born, English poet and editor, remembered for “Invictus”
1852 – Arnold Toynbee born, English economist, historian, author and social reformer; 12-volume A Study of History; he helped establish public libraries in East London, and encouraged his students to offer free classes for the working poor; Toynbee Hall, a settlement house still active today, is named for him
1868 – Edgar Lee Masters born, American poet and novelist; Spoon River Anthology
1871 – Jack Butler Yeats born, Irish artist; Ireland’s first Olympic medalist, a silver for his painting Swimming, in the arts and culture segment of the 1924 Paris games; brother of poet William Butler Yeats
The Learner by Jack Butler Yeats, 1929
1891 – Roy Agnew born, Australian composer and pianist
1898 – Southern Cross Expedition leaves London bound for the Antarctic. First expedition to over-winter on Antarctic mainland, and pioneer in the use of dogs and sledges
1900 – Malvina Reynolds born to Jewish immigrant parents who were socialist and peace activists. She was an American folk/blues singer-songwriter and political activist, best known for her songs, “Little Boxes” and “What Have They Done to the Rain.” Reynolds sang her songs frequently at gatherings for liberal causes. She opposed nuclear weapons, campaigned for civil rights, but also wrote several songs for children, including “Morningtown Ride.” She later contributed several songs and materials to Sesame Street, and made occasional appearances on the show. She earned a doctorate in English from the University of California, Berkeley (1938), and later returned to UC-Berkeley to study music theory. Reynolds was an associate of the Women’s Institute for Freedom of the Press, which was founded in 1972
1900 – Ernst Krenek born in Austria, son of a Czech soldier, American composer
1902 – Fannie Farmer opens Miss Farmer’s School of Cookery in Boston Massachusetts
1905 – Constant Lambert born, English composer and conductor
1908 – Hannah Frank born in Glasgow to Russian Jewish immigrants, Scottish artist and sculptor; she was an illustrator for GUM, the student magazine of Glasgow University even after graduation, while she continued her studies at the Glasgow School of Art, where she began clay modeling, and focused more on sculpting than painting. She often donated pieces of her work to fundraisers for Jewish organizations in Glasgow. She was a member of the Glasgow branch of Friends of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her work was exhibited by the Royal Scottish Academy, the Royal Glasgow Institute and the Royal Academy in London
1912 – Gene Kelly born, innovative American dancer, actor, director-choreographer
1922 – Nazik Al-Malaika born to a feminist poet mother and academic father, Iraqi poet, one of the most influential women poets in Iraq. Notable as the first Arabic poet to use free verse, in her ground-breaking second book of poetry, Sparks and Ashes. Her poems covered nationalism, social and feminist issues, honour killings and alienation. She left Iraq with her husband and family in 1970 after the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party came to power, moving to Kuwait, until it was invaded by Saddam Hussein in 1990, and then to Egypt, where she lived for the rest of her life in Cairo. Her other three books of poetry are And the sea changes its colour, Bottom of the Wave, and The Night’s Lover
1926 – Silent film idol Rudolf Valentino dies at age 31 because of a ruptured ulcer. Thousands mourn. Valentino Day * honors the anniversary of his death
1927 – Anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti executed in spite of worldwide pleas for pardon
1933 – Mahatma Gandhi released from jail in Poona, India, after a one-week hunger strike
1938 – Frank Capra’s movie You Can’t Take It With You starring James Stewart opens. It wins Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director
1941 – Onora O’Neill born, Baroness O’Neill of Bengrave, philosopher, academic and crossbench member of the House of Lords; President of the British Academy (2005-2009), the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences; Principal of Newnham College, Cambridge (1992-2006); founding President of the British Philosophical Association (BPA); author of numerous works on political philosophy, ethics, international justice, bioethics, the importance of trust, consent and respect for autonomy in a just society, and the philosophy of Immanuel Kant
1944 – Antonia Coello Novello born, Puerto Rican physician and public health administrator, first woman appointed Surgeon General of the United States, vice admiral in the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, Commissioner of Health for the State of New York
1947 – Keith Moon born, drummer for The Who
1948 – World Council of Churches, a global fellowship of Christian churches, is formed
1949 – Vicky Leandros born as Vassiliki Papathanasiou, Greek singer with an international career, but best known in Europe, record producer and politician. She was elected as town councilor of the Greek harbour town of Piraeus in 2006, and also served as Deputy Mayor until 2008. She has several gold and platinum records, and sings in German, English, French and Spanish as well as Greek
1954 – Halimah Yacob born, Singapore Independent politician; first woman President of Singapore, and also National Singapore University Chancellor since 2017; Speaker of the Parliament of Singapore (2013-2017); Member of Parliament (2001-2017)
1954 – First Flight of C-130 Hercules aircraft
1956 – Valgerd Svarstad Haugland born, Norwegian teacher, politician and civil servant. Governor of Akershus since 2011; Minister of Culture (2001-2005); leader of the Christian Democratic Party (1995-2004); Minister of Children and Family Affairs (1997-2000)
1958 – Roberta Rudnick born, American earth scientist and professor of geology at University of California, Santa Barbara; world expert on the continental crust and lithosphere; fellow of the American Geophysical Union since 2005, and member of the National Academy of Sciences since 2010; awarded the 2012 Dana Medal by the Mineralogical Society of America; editor-in-chief of Chemical Geology (2000-2010)
1962 – U.S. Telstar relays first live broadcast between U.S. and Europe
1971 – Gretchen Whitmer born, Democratic politician; Governor of Michigan since January, 2019; Ingham County Prosecutor (2016 – finished the term of the previous prosecutor after he was arrested on charges of involvement with a prostitute and willful neglect of duty); Minority Leader of the Michigan Senate (2011-2015); Member of the Michigan Senate, 23rd district (2006-2015); Member of the Michigan House of Representatives (2001-2006)
1973 – Stockholm, Sweden, bank robbery hostage crisis lasts 5 days, term “Stockholm syndrome” is coined to describe hostages sympathy with their captors
1977 – National Ride the Wind Day * commemorates Paul MacCready’s Gossamer Condor-2, piloted by cyclist Bryan Allen, winning the Kremer prize for human-powered flight, flying a figure-eight course at 11 mph, for a distance of 2, 172 meters
1983 – Athena Farrokhzad born in Iran, Iranian-Swedish poet, playwright, translator, literary critic, and controversial host of the Sverges Radio show Sommar since 2014; joint winner of the Karin Boye Literary Prize in 2013
1989 – Singing Revolution: two million people from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania join hands on the Vilnius-Talinn road
1996 – President Clinton imposed limits peddling cigarettes to minors
1998 – UNESCO adopts resolution establishing International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition * in honor of the successful Haitian slave uprising which played a crucial role in abolishing the transatlantic slave trade
2011 – Magnitude 5.8 (moderate) earthquake in Virginia causes an estimated $200 million–$300 million in damages to monuments and structures in Washington DC
2017 – Fields of flowers bloom suddenly after unexpected heavy rain falls on the Atacama Desert in Chile, the driest place on Earth
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Nice
Thanks Chris