August 28th is
Radio Commercials Day *
Cherry Turnover Day
National Bow Tie Day
National Red Wine Day
Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day
Race Your Mouse Around the Icons Day
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MORE! Evadne Price, James Wong Howe and Rita Dove, click
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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS
Brazil – São Paulo:
São Paulo International Short Film Festival
India – Ayyankali Jayanti **
(birthday of untouchables champion)
Kenya – Nairobi:
Africa Bitcoin Fest
Mexico – Día del Abuelo
(Grandparents Day)
Netherlands – Leeuwarden:
Psy-Fi Seed of Science Festival
Philippines – Cagayan de Oro:
Higalaay Festival (Friendship Festival)
South Africa – Pretoria:
Festival of A Capella
United Kingdom – Harrow:
Village Show, Headstone Manor Museum
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On This Day in HISTORY
489 – The army of Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths, defeats the forces of Odoacer, the first King of Italy (476-493), at the Battle of Isonzo on the banks of the Isontius River, (there were TWELVE ‘Battles of Isonzo’ during WWI, but that’s another story entirely) THIS Battle of Isonzo is often considered a marker for the beginning of the end of the Western Roman Empire
632 – In Medina, the death of Fatima az-Zahra, aka Fatimah bint Muhammad, daughter of Muhammad, the Islamic Prophet, and Khadija (While Fatimah is a revered figure for all Muslims, the exact date and cause of her death are disputed by various factions)
1023 – Go-Reizei born, Emperor of Japan (1045-1068). In 1051, Abe samurai clan leaders Abe no Sadatō and Munetō instigated the Zenkunen War (Early Nine Years War, 1051–1062), and Minamoto no Yoriyoshi was appointed governor of Mutsu and named chinjufu shōgun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North). Go-Reizei died at age 44 leaving no direct heirs, and was succeeded by his father’s second son, who became Emperor Go-Sanjō
1524 – The Kaqchikel Maya begin a rebellion against their former Spanish allies in defeating their enemies, the neighboring K’iche’ Kingdom, during the Spanish conquest of Guatemala, proving the enemy of your enemy is not always your friend
1609 – Henry Hudson reaches what is now Delaware Bay
1749 – Johann Wolfgang Goethe born, German author, poet and philosopher
1774 – Elizabeth Ann Seton born, first person born in the U.S. to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church, in 1975. She founded the first American Catholic girls’ school, in Maryland, and also founded the Sisters of Charity, first American congregation of religious sisters
1789 – William Herschel discovers another moon of Saturn, named after a giant in Greek mythology, Enceladus
1828 – Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy, Russian author, is born; War and Peace
1830 – The passenger-carrying train “Tom Thumb” is demonstrated in Baltimore MD
1833 – The Slavery Abolition Act receives Royal Assent, abolishing slavery in almost all of the British Empire
1845 – First issue of Scientific American magazine is published
1850 – Wagner’s opera Lohengrin premieres
1859 – Lida (Matilda) Scott Howell born, American archer who won three gold medals at the 1904 Summer Olympics in St. Louis, Missouri, the first time women competed in archery in the modern Olympics. She also won 17 U.S. national championship titles. She retired from national competition in 1907. Archery was discontinued from the Olympics after 1920, due to lack of standardized international rules, and wasn’t reinstated until 1972
1863 – Ayyankali * born, advocate for advancement of India’s “untouchable” Dalits caste; founded the first school for Dalit children, but it was destroyed in an arson fire; campaigned for admission of Dalit children to public schools; the order to admit them was finally put effect in 1910 after several years of struggle; founder of group Sadhu Jana Paripalana Sangham, dedicated to advancing the rights of Dalits in education, employment and civil rights
1879 – Cetshwayo, the last Zulu king, is captured by the British
1888 – Evadne Price born in Australia, Australian-British astrologer and prolific writer under the pen name Helen Zenna Smith. She wrote many romance novels, but is best known for her WWI novel Not So Quiet, (a play on Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front) depicting the experiences of British women ambulance drivers, and her Jane Turpin short stories in 1930s magazines, which were published in a series of books in the 1940s, including Jane at War. During WWII, she was a war correspondent for The People, covering the Allied invasion of Europe and many major war stories, including the Nuremberg Trials. She was the first woman journalist to enter the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. For 25 years, she wrote a monthly astrology column in SHE magazine, and was the presenter on an afternoon programme during the early years of BBC television called Fun With the Stars. She co-wrote scripts in the 1960s with her husband Ken Attiwill for the British TV soap-opera Crossroads. She died in 1985 at the age of 96, leaving an unfinished autobiography she had titled Mother Painted Nude
1898 – Caleb Bradham’s beverage “Brad’s Drink” is renamed “Pepsi-Cola”
1899 – James Wong Howe born in China, innovative American cinematographer
1903 – Bruno Bettelheim born in Austria, American psychologist, academic and author; a 1977 National Book Award for The Uses of Enchantment
1907 – Teenagers Jim Casey and Claude Ryan start the American Messenger Company, which becomes United Parcel Service
1908 – Roger Tory Peterson born, American naturalist, ornithologist and author; a pioneer in the environmental movement; Wild America, Peterson Field Guides
1913 – Richard Tucker born, major post-WWII American operatic tenor at the Met; also served as a cantor, especially at the Jewish High Holy Days services
1913 – Queen Wilhelmina opens the Peace Palace in The Hague, now home of the International Court of Justice
1913 – Robertson Davies born, Canadian novelist, playwright and academic; The Deptford Trilogy; Leaven of Malice won 1955 Stephen Leacock Award for Humour
1915 – Tasha Tudor born, notable illustrator and author of children’s books; won Caldecott Honors for Mother Goose; author of a series starting with Corgiville Fair
There was an old woman who lived in a shoe.
She had so many children, she didn’t know what to do.
1917 – Woman Suffrage protesters outside the White House compare President Wilson to the German Kaiser. Ten of them are arrested, sentenced to work camps, then their hunger strike is ended by forced feeding
1921 – Lidia Gueler Tejeda born, Bolivian politician; Acting President of Boliva (1979-1980), Bolivia’s first woman Head of State; President of the Bolivian Chamber of Deputies (1979); Member of the Congress of Bolivia (1956-1964)
1922 – First radio commercial * aired on NYC’s WEAF when the Queensboro Realty Company buys 10 minutes of airtime for $100
1924 – Janet Frame born, pseudonym of Nene Janet Paterson Clutha, New Zealand author, also known for her personal history; her book The Lagoon and Other Stories, published in 1951, won the prestigious Hubert Church Memorial Award just days before she was scheduled to have a lobotomy, which was cancelled when the award was announced. She had some difficulty in school during two years of theoretical studies in psychology, and during a year of practical placement, she became despondent and attempted suicide, and was briefly admitted to a psychiatric ward for observation. She was unwilling to return home, where there were frequent outbursts of anger and violence between her father and her brother, so she was transferred to Seacliff Lunatic Asylum, and then spent the next eight years in and out of psychiatric hospitals. Her initial diagnosis of schizophrenia, was treated with electroconvulsive therapy and insulin. In spite of this, she wrote her short story collection during this time, and it saved her from being lobotomized. Four years later, she was discharged from Seacliff, and wrote her first full-length novel, Owls Do Cry, published in 1957, then went to Europe, and later traveled in the U.S., but still struggled with anxiety and depression. Her three volumes of autobiography, To the Island, An Angel at My Table and The Envoy from Mirror City, were her best-selling books. She died in 2004, at age 79, from acute myeloid leukaemia
1924 – The rebellion of Georgians seeking independence from Soviet rule is launched; it will last just over a year before it is crushed by the Red Army
1931 – France and the USSR sign a non-aggression treaty
1931 – ‘Red’ Allen records “You Rascal You” with the Luis Russell Band
1942 – Wendy E. Davies born, Welsh historian and academic; Emeritus Professor of History at University College, London; noted for her studies of Welsh and Briton history, and her analysis of the Llandaff Charters; founding Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales; and co-director of the interdisciplinary Celtic Inscribed Stones Project
1943 – In Denmark, a general strike against the Nazi occupation begins
1948 – Vonda McIntyre born, American science fiction author and founder of the Clarion West Writers Workshop in Seattle, Washington, with support from Robin Scott Wilson, founder of the original Clarion Writers Workshop in Pennsylvania. Her first novel, The Exile Waiting, was published in 1975. She was co-editor with Susan Janice Anderson of Aurora: Beyond Equality, a feminist-humanist science fiction anthology, in 1976. She wrote a number of Star Trek and Star Wars novels. In 1979, her novel Dreamsnake won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Novel. The Moon and the Sun, set in the court of Louis XIV, was published in 1997. Her last book, Curve of the World, was completed just before her death in 2019
1948 – Heather Reisman born, Canadian founder and CEO of Indigo Books and Music, and the founder of Indigo Love of Reading Foundation, which donates millions of books to libraries in under-resourced public elementary schools. She has donated to many charities and scholarship programs. In 2010, she started an online petition during the international campaign to save Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, an Iraniam Aseri woman convicted of adultery and complicity in the murder of her husband, who was sentenced to death by stoning. Ashtiani remained on death row for nine years before her sentence was commuted, and she was freed in 2014
1948 – Elizabeth Wilmshurst born, British jurist, legal adviser and academic; Distinguished Fellow of the International Law Programme at Chatham House (Royal Institute of International Affairs), and Professor of International Law at University College London. She was the leading British negotiator of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, both within the framework of the UN Preparatory Committee for the Establishment of an ICC (1996-1998) and the Rome Diplomatic Conference (1998). Wilmshurst was Deputy Legal Adviser at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the United Kingdom in 2003, but resigned three days after Lord Goldsmith’s final advice to the British government reversed her legal opinion that the invasion of Iraq would be illegal without a second UN Security Council Resolution to SCR 678, adopted in November, 1990, noting that Iraq continued to defy the Security Council’s demand that Iraq withdraw from Kuwait by January 15, 1991, and empowering states to use “all necessary means” to force Iraq out if it was still in Kuwait after the deadline. In 2010, Willshurst gave evidence to the British Iraq Inquiry about the legality of the 2003 Iraq invasion and the advice given to former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw on the same day as her former boss, Sir Michael Wood. Noted for the widely used An Introduction to International Criminal Law and Procedure, which she co-edited with Robert Cryer, Hakan Friman and Darryl Robinson
1952 – Rita Dove born, African American poet, essayist and academic; she was the youngest appointee as U.S. Poet Laureate (1993-1995) and was a Special Consultant in Poetry (1999-2000) for the celebrations of the Bicentennial Year of the Library of Congress. Dove is also the second African American to receive the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, for Thomas and Beulah, and served as the Poet Laureate of Virginia (2004-2006). Noted for On the Bus with Rosa Parks, Mother Love and Collected Poems: 1974-2004, which was a finalist for a 2016 National Book Award
1954 – Katherine Abraham born. American feminist economist; Director of the Maryland Center for Economics and Policy, and a professor of Survey Methodology and Economics at the University of Maryland. Commissioner of Labor Statistics at the Bureau of Labor Statistics (1993-2001) and a member of the Council of Economic Advisers (2011-2013); honored with the 2002 Julius Shiskin Award for Economic Statistics and the 2010 Roger Herriot Award for Innovation in Federal Statistics
1955 – Black teenager Emmett Till, accused of whistling at a white woman, is brutally murdered in Mississippi, galvanizing the Civil Rights Movement
1957 – U.S. Senator Strom Thurmond (SC) filibusters to prevent a Senate vote on the Civil Rights Act. He holds the floor for 24 hours, 18 minutes, the longest filibuster conducted by a single Senator
1963 – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gives his “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington before a crowd of more than 200,000 people
1966 – Priya Dutt Roncon born, Indian social worker and Indian National Congress party politician; Member of the Indian Parliament for Mumbai North Central (2009-2014) and for Mumbai North West (2005-2009). During and after the Bombay riots in Mumbai in December 1992 and January 1993, she worked with Muslim refugees; during which she reported getting threatening phone calls and being harassed in public
1968 – During the Democratic National Convention, 10,000 anti-war protesters take to the streets of Chicago. Denied legal permits by Chicago Mayor Daley, several leaders are arrested by Chicago police on August 23. On August 28, in Grant Park, the police riot, beating protesters, journalists and bystanders, and using massive amounts of tear gas and mace. As the riot spills over in front of the Hilton Hotel, the crowd begins chanting “the whole world is watching” before the television cameras
1970 – The Jackson Five release their single “I’ll Be There”
1975 – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announces a ban on the use of polyvinyl chloride plastic for packaging of certain foods, because of its potential for causing cancer. At the time, PVC was the second most-used plastic in American food packaging. Although PVC film wrapping of meat and fruits still permitted, use of hard PVC plastic on lunch meat packages, and for bottles of liquids, is prohibited
1981 – Kezia Dugdale born, Scottish Labour Party politician; Leader of the Scottish Labour Party (2015-2017); Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Finance and the Constitution (2016-2017); Deputy Leader of the Scottish Labour Party (2014-2015); Scottish Labour Spokesperson for Education and Lifelong Learning (2013-2014); Member of the Scottish Parliament for Lothian (2011-2019)
1995 – Chase Manhattan and Chemical Bank merge to become the largest U.S. bank
1998 – Pakistan’s National Assembly passes a constitutional amendment to make the “Qur’an and Sunnah” the “supreme law” of the land but the bill is defeated in the Senate.
2005 – New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin orders the evacuation of the city ahead of Hurricane Katrina
2008 – Barack Obama accepts his party’s presidential nomination at the Democratic Convention in Denver CO
2013 – China and Russia walk out of a UN Security Council meeting after the U.S. pushes for immediate action against Syria for its use of chemical weapons
2015 – After Egypt’s highest appeals court ordered a retrial of three Al Jazeera journalists originally given sentences of 7 to 10 years, Mohamed Fahmy, Baher Mohamed, and Peter Greste received revised sentences of three years each. They were prosecuted for “operating without a press license” and “broadcasting ‘fake’ news.” The retrial was ordered after an international outcry over the original sentences. Amnesty International called the new verdict “farcical”
Mohamed Fahmy, Peter Greste and Baher Mohamed
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