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Postby djv1 » Sun 18 Apr, 2004 12:15 am

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN DIES:
April 17, 1790

On April 17, 1790, American statesman, printer, scientist, and writer Benjamin Franklin dies in Philadelphia at age 84.

Born in Boston in 1706, Franklin became at 12 years old an apprentice to his half brother James, a printer and publisher. He learned the printing trade and in 1723 went to Philadelphia to work after a dispute with his brother. After a sojourn in London, he started a printing and publishing press with a friend in 1728. In 1729, the company won a contract to publish Pennsylvania's paper currency and also began publishing the Pennsylvania Gazette, which was regarded as one of the better colonial newspapers. From 1732 to 1757, he wrote and published Poor Richard's Almanack, an instructive and humorous periodical in which Franklin coined such practical American proverbs as "God helps those who help themselves" and "Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise."

As his own wealth and prestige grew, Franklin took on greater civic responsibilities in Philadelphia and helped establish the city's first circulating library, police force, volunteer fire company, and an academy that became the University of Pennsylvania. From 1737 to 1753, he was postmaster of Philadelphia and during this time also served as a clerk of the Pennsylvania legislature. In 1753, he became deputy postmaster general, in charge of mail in all the northern colonies.

Deeply interesting in science and technology, he invented the Franklin stove, which is still manufactured today, and bifocal eyeglasses, among other practical inventions. In 1748, he turned his printing business over to his partner so he would have more time for his experiments. The phenomenon of electricity fascinated him, and in a dramatic experiment he flew a kite in a thunderstorm to prove that lightning is an electrical discharge. He later invented the lightning rod. Many terms used in discussing electricity, including positive, negative, battery, and conductor, were coined by Franklin in his scientific papers. He was the first American scientist to be highly regarded in European scientific circles.

Franklin was active in colonial affairs and in 1754 proposed the union of the colonies, which was rejected by Britain. In 1757, he went to London to argue for the right to tax the massive estates of the Penn family in Pennsylvania, and in 1764 went again to ask for a new charter for Pennsylvania. He was in England when Parliament passed the Stamp Act, a taxation measure to raise revenues for a standing British army in America. His initial failure to actively oppose the controversial act drew wide criticism in the colonies, but he soon redeemed himself by stoutly defending American rights before the House of Commons. With tensions between the American colonies and Britain rising, he stayed on in London and served as agent for several colonies.

In 1775, he returned to America as the American Revolution approached and was a delegate at the Continental Congress. In 1776, he helped draft the Declaration of Independence and in July signed the final document. Ironically, Franklin's illegitimate son, William Franklin, whom Franklin and his wife had raised, had at the same time emerged as a leader of the Loyalists. In 1776, Congress sent Benjamin Franklin, one of the embattled United States' most prominent statesmen, to France as a diplomat. Warmly embraced, he succeeded in 1778 in securing two treaties that provided the Americans with significant military and economic aid. In 1781, with French help, the British were defeated. With John Jay and John Adams, Franklin then negotiated the Treaty of Paris with Britain, which was signed in 1783.

In 1785, Franklin returned to the United States. In his last great public service, he was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and worked hard for the document's ratification. After his death in 1790, Philadelphia gave him the largest funeral the city had ever seen.
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Postby djv1 » Sun 18 Apr, 2004 12:18 am

April 18

1974 The Red Brigade terrorizes Italy

Italian prosecutor Mario Sossi is kidnapped by the Red Brigade. It was the first time that the left-wing terrorist group had directly struck the Italian government, marking the beginning of tensions that lasted for 10 years.

The Red Brigade was founded by college student Renato Curcio in 1969 to battle "against the imperialist state of the multinationals." At first, the fledgling organization restricted its activities to small acts of vandalism and arson. However, in 1972, they abducted business executive Idalgo Macchiarini, releasing him a short time later with a sign that said, "Hit one to educate 100. All power to the armed people." The Red Brigade kidnapped several other executives in the years following.

The kidnapping of Mario Sossi marked the first time that the Red Brigade demanded a ransom: They insisted on the release of eight imprisoned members. After fellow prosecutor Francesco Coco agreed to the demand, Sossi was released. However, Coco reneged on the deal and infuriated the Red Brigade.

Over the next several years, the terrorist group kidnapped 26 wealthy men and women to fund their criminal enterprises, extorting as much as $2 million for one abduction. They also got revenge on Coco, killing him in 1975. That same year, 49 members were prosecuted in Turin, prompting several retaliatory shootings against government officials.

In 1978, the ante was upped even further after some of the Red Brigade's leaders were arrested. Aldo Moro, a former Italian prime minister, was kidnapped on March 16, 1978, and five bodyguards were killed in the attack. For 55 days, the terrorists made various demands while taunting Moro's family with fake death announcements. On May 9, after their demands were refused, Moro's body was found in the trunk of a red car in the middle of Rome. He had been shot 11 times in the chest. The Red Brigade killed seven more politicians in the next week, terrorizing the whole country of Italy.

Sixty-three persons ended up being charged with involvement in Moro's murder. Prospero Gallinari, the actual shooter, and 22 others were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. The Red Brigade was finally crushed in the early 1980s when over 400 members were jailed.
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21 April

Postby Antony » Tue 20 Apr, 2004 11:11 pm

April 21, 753BC Romulus and Remus founded Rome.

Quick story:
Romulus and Remus
In Roman legend, twin brothers who were raised by a she-wolf and founded the city of Rome. They came from a city founded by the son of Aeneas. During the construction of Rome, Romulus became incensed at Remus and killed him. The Romans later made Romulus into a god.

Rome is named for Romulus.

Yes, let's talk about Mythology (Roman Mythology)
Romulus and Remus
Romulus and Remus were the twin sons of Rhea Silvia and Mars. They were, together with their mother, cast into the Tiber. The god Tiberinus saved Rhea Silvia from drowning, and the brothers were miraculously rescued by a she-wolf. The wolf reared the twins together with her cubs underneath a fig tree (the 'ruminalus ficus'). After a few years they were found by the shepherd Faustulus, who took the brothers home and gave them to his wife Acca Larentia to raise.

When they reached maturity they killed Amelius, the brother of their grandfather, and built a settlement on the Palatine Hill. During a quarrel where Remus mocked the height of the walls, Romulus slew Remus and became the sole ruler of the new Rome, which he had named after himself. He took Hersilia as his wife.

To enlarge his empire, he allowed exiles and refugees, homicides and runaway slaves to populate the area. The shortage of women he solved by stealing Sabine women whom he invited to a festival. After a few wars, the Sabines agreed to accept Romulus as their king. Upon his death he was taken to the heavens by his father Mars. He is later revered as the god Quirinus.


(Source: GuruNet, Encyclopedia Mythica)
"Romulus." Encyclopedia Mythica from Encyclopedia Mythica Online.
http://www.pantheon.org/articles/r/romulus.html
[Accessed April 21, 2004].
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24th April

Postby Antony » Fri 23 Apr, 2004 9:04 am

24th April, this weekend is the 30th anniversary of one of Australia's most eye-catching inventions - streaking.

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Australia's finest export - streaking (news.com.au 23rd April 2003)

And don't miss out the famous streaking in 2002's Bledisloe Cup, a free advertising for Vodafone.
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27 April

Postby Antony » Mon 26 Apr, 2004 11:33 pm

27th April 1989
Tiananmen Square -- taken over by Beijing students.

(Source: GuruNet)
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April 30

Postby Antony » Fri 30 Apr, 2004 12:21 am

30th April 1945
Adolf Hitler committed suicide with his wife Eva Braun as Russian troops neared his Berlin bunker.

Adolf Hitler:
Hitler's dictatorial rule of Germany, which led to the deaths of millions in World War II, has placed him among history's most-hated villains. A decorated veteran of World War I, Adolf Hitler joined the German Workers' Party in 1919, later renaming it the National Socialist German Workers Party (shortened to Nazi). By 1921 he was the leader of the group, and in 1923 led an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the ruling German Weimar Republic. Sentenced to prison for his role, Hitler wrote his manifesto, Mein Kampf, and emerged less than a year later as a populist spokesman for economically depressed and nationalistic Germans. Made chancellor in 1933, he suspended the constitution, forcibly suppressed all political opposition and brought the Nazis to power. He enforced policies with a brutal secret police (the Gestapo) and formed concentration camps for the organized murder of Jews, Gypsies and political opponents. Hitler's aggressive foreign policy precipitated World War II in 1939. Although he had remarkable early success in the war, by 1942 the tide had turned. Hitler apparently committed suicide in an air-raid shelter in Berlin in 1945, after the Allied forces had invaded Germany.

One day before his death, Hitler finally married his longtime girlfriend Eva Braun; she committed suicide with him by swallowing cyanide on 30 April 1945. Hitler apparently swallowed cyanide and then shot himself.

Adolf Hitler: 20 April 1889 - 30 April 1945

30th April 1975
Vietnam War ended when Duong Van Minh, president of S. Vietnam, surrendered.

(Source: GuruNet, Who2)
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12 May

Postby Antony » Wed 12 May, 2004 1:49 am

12 May 1937 - King Geroge VI was crowned at Westminster Abbey.

King George VI

Name at birth: Albert Frederick Arthur George Saxe-Coburg-Gotha

Called Albert as a young man, the future king was the great-grandson of Queen Victoria and the second son of King George V. Albert served in the Royal Navy during World War I and was created Duke of York in 1920. He married Elizabeth Bowles-Lyon (b. 1900, d. 2002) on 26 April 1923; the couple had two daughters, Elizabeth (b. 1926) and Margaret (b. 1930, d. 2002). The Duke became King George VI when his elder brother, King Edward VIII, abdicated on 10 December 1936 to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. George VI was formally crowned on 12 May 1937. During World War II the king and queen were praised for their staunch resolve and morale-boosting visits to factories and war-battered cities while the government of Winston Churchill prosecuted the war. A heavy smoker, George VI was recovering from an operation for lung cancer when he died of a heart attack in 1952. His daughter became Queen Elizabeth II.

George VI died in the same building at Sandringham in which he was born... He was born with the family name of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha but died with the family name of Windsor; as explained by the Royal Family's official site, "The name Saxe-Coburg-Gotha came to the British Royal Family in 1840 with the marriage of Queen Victoria to Prince Albert, son of Ernst, Duke of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha... King George V replaced the German-sounding title with that of Windsor during the First World War."

King George VI
14 December 1895 - 6 February 1952
Best Known As: King of Great Britain during WWII

(Source: GuruNet)
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14th May 2004

Postby Antony » Fri 14 May, 2004 9:57 pm

14th Mary 2004 - Australian Mary Donaldson marries Danish Crown Prince Frederik
Mary Donaldson became Crown Princess Mary, she was born in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Australia, a former British colony, has never had its own royalty, this wedding adds some remarks to Australia history.
Donaldson and Prince Frederik met during Sydney Olympics 2000.
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Canadians remember sacrifice of D-Day

Postby Lorraine » Sun 06 Jun, 2004 10:40 pm

June 6th, 2004 -Canadians remember sacrifice of D-Day

COURSEULLES-SUR-MER, FRANCE - Prime Minister Paul Martin joined Governor General Adrienne Clarkson and other dignitaries on a Normandy beach for Canada's 60th anniversary D-Day ceremony Sunday.


RELATED: D-Day 60th anniversary

The Queen meets with Canadian veterans at Courseulles-sur-Mer

Hundreds of Canadian veterans and their families also gathered at Juno Beach, where Allied forces landed on June 6, 1944 to help liberate Europe from the Nazis.

Among those who spoke was the Queen, who saluted what she called "the heroes and veterans of an historic campaign."


RELATED: Prince honours Canadian war dead
BENY SUR-MER, FRANCE - Prince Charles joined Canadian war veterans in France Saturday morning for a ceremony to commemorate the D-Day landings of 60 years ago that began the liberation of Europe from the Nazis.


Prime Minister Paul Martin will take a few days off the campaign trail to be in France for the D-Day remembrances.
Martin said the free world will always salute and be grateful for the sacrifices made by those who took part in the invasion.

"Forevermore we will come to this lonely patch of beauty to look upon the beaches, to reflect, to marvel, to feel the tears rise and the heart pound, to say a silent thank-you," Martin said in his speech.

"Forevermore we will come to this place of sad and triumphant history to see where tyranny was repelled and where freedom was reborn."

Many of the veterans walked out to the shore; they scanned the coastline and chatted with friends. Some on the beach shook hands with people from Normandy who said thank-you for liberating their towns.

Organizers at the international ceremony in Arromanches held an elaborate, multi-media show, with performers dressed in black before a backdrop of giant screens displaying war film footage and photographs.

At the American cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach, U.S. President Bush W. Bush joined French President Jacques Chirac and others to thank the soldiers who invaded France 60 years ago.

"America would do it again for our friends," he said of the landings.

In Ottawa, veterans gathered before the National War Memorial to remember the D-Day landings. To mark the start of the ceremony, two CF-18s flanked a Second World War Spitfire as the aircraft flew in formation overhead.

Conservative leader Stephen Harper and NDP leader Jack Layton took time out of their election campaigns to lay wreaths at the monument.

Canada contributed about 18,000 troops to the landing in 1944. Nearly 360 young Canadians died in the invasion that day.

This is an excerpt from an article in http://www.cbc.news.ca
"Written by CBC News Online staff"
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Postby keith » Sun 06 Jun, 2004 10:57 pm

come to think of it, we were talkin about that in my social class......


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Postby Antony » Sun 20 Jun, 2004 11:21 pm

21 June 1989 The Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag as a form of political protest is protected by the First Amendment's protection of freedom of speech.

What is the freedom of speech?
Liberty to speak and otherwise express oneself and one's opinions. Like freedom of the press (see press, freedom of the), which pertains to the publication of speech, freedom of speech itself has been absolute in no time or place. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution bars the federal government from “abridging the freedom of speechâ€
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Postby Antony » Wed 23 Jun, 2004 9:55 am

24 June 1314 - Battle of Bannockburn
The 10,000-man Scots army led by, Robert Bruce, defeated troops of 23,000 Englishmen led by English king Edward II, thus climaxing Robert's struggle for Scottish independence and establishing him as king of the Scots.

(source: GuruNet)
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Postby Wellander » Thu 15 Jul, 2004 11:52 am

Hi,
One year ago.
15th July 2003 Mozilla funduation was created.
It was spun off by AOL/Time Warner Corp.
It made it an independent company.
Mozilla still lives today.
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Postby Antony » Fri 16 Jul, 2004 2:19 am

16th July, 1918
Tsar Nicholas II, along with his wife and five children, executed by the Bolsheviks.

Nikolai Aleksandrovich succeeded his father as Tsar (Czar) of Russia in 1894. As Tsar (Czar) he directed the construction of the Trans-Siberian railroad, and joined the Allies in World War I. Years of popular discontent with his domestic and foreign policies led to the Russian Revolution, and Nicholas II was forced to abdicate on March 15, 1917. He and his entire family were executed by the Bolsheviks in 1918, the last of the royal Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov line.

For decades it was thought that Nicholas' daughter Anastasia had escaped execution; now there's little doubt that she did not.

Nicholas II, 1868–1918, last tsar (czar) of Russia (1894–1917), son of Alexander III and Maria Feodorovna.

16th July, 1999
John F. Kennedy Jr. and his wife and sister-in-law died when the plane he was piloting crashed near Martha's Vineyard, MA

Kennedy was the son of president John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and the younger brother of Caroline Kennedy. John Jr. appeared as a three-year-old in one of the most famous film clips of the 1960s, saluting his father's casket after the president was assassinated in 1963. As an adult Kennedy studied law and worked for a few years in the Manhattan District Attorney's office; later he founded the political magazine George. JFK Jr. was a famously eligible bachelor before finally marrying the former Carolyn Bessette in 1996. Kennedy, his wife and her sister were all killed in 1999 when a private plane piloted by Kennedy crashed in the Atlantic Ocean near Martha's Vineyard.

(Source: GuruNet, Who2)
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Postby Antony » Sat 17 Jul, 2004 11:22 pm

18th July, 64
A fire that destroyed two-thirds of city Rome began on this day in year 64 (AD). Rome was rebuilt by Nero.
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