Wednesday, February 12, 2020
Today's Leasing News Headlines
Bernie Boettigheimer Visitation/Funeral
Today and Thursday
2019 Leasing/Finance Association Membership Grows
Preliminary Report
Small Business Optimism Begins the Year on Positive Note
35/7 Wall Street Report
Aggregate Funding Sources - Updated
(Online: connects lessees, lessors, and vendors)
Leasing Industry Ads---Help Wanted
GreatAmerica Financial Services
Processor/Account Manager/Hunters or All Three?
Sales Makes it Happen by Scott Wheeler, CLFP
Most Influential Women in Leasing and Finance
One New Nomination
The "Best Picture" Rarely is a Box Office Hit
Winners of Oscars Compared To Box Office Movies $ Gross
Custom of Shipping Cars Overseas Threatened
Dale Dave, President, Endeavor Financial Services
Leasing News Advisor
Steve Crane, CLFP
Discount Domination: Dollar Stores are Thriving in America
Smaller Stores, Convenient, Taking Over Direct Retail Sales
Labrador Retriever Mix
Menlo Park, California Adopt a Dog
FREE WEBINAR - Attracting & Retaining Great Talent
Wednesday, Feb. 26, 3:00pm ET
News Briefs---
Powell, Warning of a Possible Virus Fallout,
Is Slammed Again by Trump
Job openings in the U.S. fall to 2-year low
fell to 6.42 million at end of 2019 as hiring slowed
Xerox raises HP buyout offer to $34 billion
Latest bid in acquisition saga values HP at $24 a share
Judge approves controversial merger of T-Mobile and Sprint
NY Att. Gen. Calls it a "loss" for consumers
Popeye’s’ Sales: ‘Never Seen This Kind of Response’
System-wide sales up 42 % for 1/4/ 18.5% for the year
Chinese Military Hackers Charged
Over Equifax Data Breach
The Wall Street Journal joins The New York Times
in the 2 million digital subscriber club
Broker/Funder/Industry Lists | Features (wrilter's columns)
Top Ten Stories Chosen by Readers | Top Stories last six months
www.leasingcomplaints.com (Be Careful of Doing Business)
www.evergreenleasingnews.org
Leasing News Icon for Android Mobile Device
May Have Missed
Poem
Sports Brief----
California Nuts Brief---
"Gimme that Wine"
This Day in History
SuDoku
Daily Puzzle
GasBuddy
Weather, USA or specific area
Traffic Live----
######## surrounding the article denotes it is a “press release,” it was not written by Leasing News nor has the information been verified. The source noted. When an article is signed by the writer, it is considered a “byline.” It reflects the opinion and research of the writer.
Please send a colleague and ask them to subscribe. We are free
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Bernie Boettigheimer Visitation/Funeral
Today and Thursday
Visitation: Wednesday, February 12th, 6pm-8pm at Sparkman Hillcrest Funeral Home - 7405 W Northwest Hwy, Dallas, TX 75225
Church Service: Thursday, February 13th, 11am-12pm at Christ the King Catholic Church - 8017 Preston Rd, Dallas, TX 75225
Reception: Immediately following the church service at the Christ the King Catholic Church Community Center - 8017 Preston
Leasing Icon Bernard D. Boettigheimer Passes Away
Son John Sends Announcement of Visitation/Service
http://leasingnews.org/archives/Feb2020/02_10.htm#boettigheimer
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2019 Leasing/Finance Association Membership Grows
Preliminary Report
Leasing News will be breaking down the specific category of members per association which indicates the "personality" as well as the type of industry membership they attract.
Equipment Leasing and Finance Association
American Association of Commercial Finance Brokers
Association for Governmental Leasing & Finance
National Equipment Finance Association
Since 2000
Canadian Finance & Leasing 199 members; Certified Lease and Finance Foundation, 862 members.
Actually AACFB reports over 500 members at the time, and CLFP has also increased, will reach 1,000 this year.
Should note: AGLF final 2019 membership numbers are:
7 Individuals
16 Limited
46 Basic Company Members with 152 total people
8 Leader Company Members with 223 total people
But report in this manner:
Total members of AGLF are 460.
Note: The United Association of Equipment Leasing and Eastern Association of Equipment Lessors merged voted in 2009 to merge, voting to change the name of the new association to the National Equipment Finance Association (NEFA).
NEFA has undergone several changes. The association began in 2000 as Western Association of Equipment Lessors, became dormant, organized again in 2004, then was in the verge of changing it name to Worldwide Association of Equipment Leasing (even had a logo), then On Dr. Ray William's watch: WAEL becomes UAEL (United Association of Equipment Leasing in 2001.
Part I| Part II | Part III | Part IV
http://leasingnews.org/Conscious-Top%20Stories/WAEL_Hist_IV.htm
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Small Business Optimism Begins the Year on Positive Note
35/7 Wall Street Report
The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) Tuesday morning reported that its small business optimism index rose from 102.7 in December 2019 to 104.3 in January 2020. This month’s index is the top 10% of index readings in more than four decades. The consensus estimate from economists had called for the January index to increase to 103.2.
The percentage of business owners who now expect the economy to improve in the next few months dipped by two percentage points to 14% in January following a three-point gain in September and a gain of one point in October. The earnings trend slipped by three points from a net zero to a net −3% of business owners reporting quarter-over-quarter profits.
Some 36% of small business owners reported raising employees’ pay in the past three months. That’s seven points higher on a seasonally adjusted basis compared with December. The percentage of firms planning to raise net compensation remained unchanged at 24%.
In its small business jobs report published last week, the NFIB noted that the month-over-month job creation component remained flat at 19% and the job openings component rose by four points to 37%.
NFIB’s Chief Economist, Bill Dunkelberg, commented in the jobs report: “Small businesses are keeping the strong economic momentum going in the New Year. They are adding jobs and raising compensation. With the help of tax and regulatory relief, the small business economy is a strong force.”
Some 37% of business owners reported job openings they couldn’t fill, up by four points month over month. A full 56% of business owners reported hiring or trying to hire workers last month, and 88% of those reported few or no qualified applicants for the available jobs.
The NFIB noted the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on small business owners:
The biggest risk appears to be potential global implications of the Wuhan coronavirus. The Fed has said it’s monitoring the spread of the disease and its impact on China’s economy, deciding in March whether there’s a larger impact that deserves policy action. But if just evaluating the U.S. economy, risks to slower economic growth are low in the near term. Small business owners remain highly optimistic on continued growth as strong policy fundamentals in D.C. remain supportive of Main Street.
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Leasing Industry Ads---Help Wanted
Opportunities for 2020
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Aggregate Funding Sources - Updated
(Online: connects lessees, lessors, and vendors)
These are online companies that connect via Financial Technology to funders of business loans, leasing, working capital, and other finance methods to secure credit approval that meet the criteria of the funder that they represent with the most attractive rate and terms for the applicant.
The list is down to two: both licensed in California. In 2000, there were 23 such companies. There are many alternate finance companies with many sources but they do not qualify as an Aggregate Funding Source.
These companies have several funders "where funders compete."
https://www.lendio.com/franchise/
Lendio, based in Lehi, Utah as Lendio Partners, LLC.
Website states they appear to have changed direction and now looking for applicants to become a “Lendio franchise. “ In the past, they advertised a network of 75 lenders offering multiple loan and lease options. They stated, "To date, Lendio has facilitated close to $1.5 billion in financing through more than 70,000 loans to business owners in all 50 states. With this access to capital, Lendio’s small business clients have generated an estimated $5 billion in economic output and created more than 35,000 jobs in communities nationwide."
Today they state, “As a Lendio Franchisee you will be able to help small business owners find the loan they need to grow their business by leveraging Lendio’s business loan marketplace. By helping your clients complete a single application, they will be reviewed by over 75 lenders, taking the headache of loan applications out of the equation!”
This company appeals primarily to vendors and other sellers of equipment.
https://www.gocurrency.com/resources/about-us/
Currency Capital is licensed as CFL (Lender and Broker), located in Los Angeles, California. They are a growth from IMCA Capital; Supermoney.com states “out of business.”
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Processor/Account Manager/Hunters or All Three?
Your Strengths
Originators in the commercial equipment leasing and finance industry are required to have many skills. It is important to know your strengths and your weaknesses. What category do your strengths fall within?
Processor: Originators are required to know the process of developing, adjudicating, documenting, and funding a transaction. Originators actually sell the process and must be well-aware of every step. However, some originators get pulled into the process and actually spend most of their time processing transactions, rather than selling the process to new prospects. These professionals are, in reality, more processors than sales professionals. Therefore, they have a difficult time ever becoming top producers.
Account Managers: Originators are often required to manage existing relationships. Many originators are highly skilled at maintaining existing accounts by being the intermediary between the needs of their clients (vendors and/or end-users) and the capabilities of their companies. Account management can be a full-time position and requires originators to know the process well and to be able to sell the process consistently. The challenge for originators that spend all of their time managing existing accounts is that they rarely have time left to develop new accounts or to create future channels. Therefore, they become highly dependent upon existing accounts and they start to bend to every demand of their existing clients.
Hunters (New Business Developers): An originator's primary responsibility is to develop new relationships. Hunters maximize their incomes by being proficient in finding and closing new relationships. Hunters create future sustainability because of their ability to consistently establish new relationships. Hunters are well-versed in their company's process and are proficient in articulating the benefits of the process. Hunters know, and are able to sell, the importance of managing a relationship and, if need be, they are able to jump into an account management role with ease. However, they focus most of their energy on developing new business.
Top producers in the commercial equipment leasing and finance industry are capable of fulfilling all three functions proficiently. Top producers are hunters first, account managers second, and processors third. They understand the importance of each function and set their priorities to maximize results.
Priorities
Scott A. Wheeler, CLFP
Wheeler Business Consulting
1314 Marquis Ct.
Fallston, Maryland 21047
Phone: 410 877 0428
Fax: 410 877 8161
Email: scott@wheelerbusinessconsulting.com
Web: www.wheelerbusinessconsulting.com
Sales Makes it Happen articles:
http://www.leasingnews.org/Legacy/index.html
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Most Influential Women in Leasing and Finance
One New Nomination
Please submit nominations to: kitmenkin@leasingnews.org
Julie Babcock has been practicing law in the leasing industry since 1993. She is known to be an "outspoken" person and excellent attorney. Julie joined the Key Equipment Finance law group in 2002, rising to Senior Vice President, Senior Counsel. In 2015, she became majority owner of the 1812 Law Group, LLC, she describes as a “small firm that...handles commercial transactions for institutional clients and other business clients. (No personal or consumer legal work.)”
In July, 2015, she was chosen in a Leasing News poll as one of the “Most Influential Lawyers in Equipment Finance and Leasing.”
https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-babcock-18563815/
These are nominations that will be reviewed and voted upon:
Barbara Griffith, Southern California Leasing: “I would like to be considered “Most Influential Women in Leasing and Finance.” I have been working in equipment financing for over 28 years. Donating my time with all the associations and given the opinion to others with shops to just do honest and good business. I have written articles, participated in conferences and supported our associations. Have a huge voice in running a company in an ethical manner. It is good for SCL that I am recognized.” https://www.linkedin.com/in/barbaragriffith/
.
Linda (Geleta) Kester, Long Time Sales Trainer, Writer, Lecturer. She began her career as Sales Manager at Advanta, then became Sales Trainer for Marlin Capital, starting her business as “Speaker, Trainer & Presenter.” She has also served as Marketing Director for NAELB Leasing School (now the American Association of Commercial Finance Brokers.) Her book, “366 Marketing Tips” is still popular. September, 2019, she joined NewLane Finance as Vice President, Marketing, as well as continuing her lecturer and writing series. She appears in many association conferences, too. From 2006 to 2009 she wrote a weekly “Sales Makes it Happen” column for Leasing News, then jumped to Monitor Magazine. She writes articles for other magazines, such as for the National Equipment and Finance Association magazine as well as other publications. https://www.linkedin.com/in/lindakester/
Lisa Rafter, who is now the Owner/Publisher of Monitor Magazine, forming an Editorial Board, offering a free e-Version of the Magazine and making other changes. She has been very active, including serving as editor from 1987 to 2004.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisa-rafter-378243a/
Reid Raykovich, CLFP, in turning around the Certified Lease and Finance Professional Foundation, activity with many associations and the industry in general, flying miles to Canada and Australia, too. She began with the CLFP Foundation in April, 2012. In 2014, she was honored with the Foundation’s Cindy Spurdle Award of Excellence. She was named Leasing News Person of the Year for 2016 and January1, 2019, joined the Leasing News Advisory Board.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/reidraykovich/
Deborah Reuben, CLFP, Consultant, Speaker, Author, has been award-recognized for her work, serving as a chairperson, and contributions with the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association, National Association of Finance Equipment, and for the Certified Leasing and Finance Foundation.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/deborahreuben/
Amy Vogt, Vice President, Communications and Marketing, Equipment Leasing and Finance Association, since July, 2010. While it may be that she represents and is active in only one leasing and finance association, her writing and press releases of all ELFA activities brings her in contact with both new and established leaders in the industry. She reports on meetings, whom she is writing, activities, and to media from major newspapers, magazines, online reporting, radio and TV. She does an outstanding performance, seemingly always available, prompt, and always helpful.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/amycvogt/
Remaining on the 2009 list:
Susan Carol, APR
Valerie Jester
Shari Lipski, CLFP
Deborah Monosson
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In a watershed moment for the Academy Awards, Parasite became the first foreign-language film to win the Oscar for Best Picture on Sunday night. Having been confined to an own category since the introduction of the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film in 1956, no non-English-language film had won the top prize in the award’s 92-year history.
Bong Joon Ho’s class satire not only beat strong competition in the Best Picture category but was also awarded for Best Directing, Best Original Screenplay and Best International Feature Film, making the South Korean drama the biggest winner of the night. Having earned $165 million at the global box office so far, Parasite has been quite successful in commercial terms, especially for a non-English-language film, but it is still worlds apart from the breathtaking numbers "traditional" blockbuster movies routinely pull these days.
As our chart illustrates, most Best Picture winners in recent years didn’t make nearly as much money as the respective year’s biggest box office hit, illustrating that commercial success and critical acclaim often don't go hand in hand. The last true blockbuster to win the Best Picture award was the third and final part of Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy, which raked in $1.1 billion at the box office worldwide and was crowned Best Picture in 2004.
By Felix Richter, Statista
https://www.statista.com/chart/8298/best-picture-winners-box-office/
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Custom of Shipping Cars Overseas Threatened
Dale Dave, President, Endeavor Financial Services
The side effect of politics on the collector car and general vehicle export market: NY State exported some $1.5b worth of consumer automobiles in 2015.
Effective February 7th 2020 the US Customs and Border Protection agency is unable to connect to the NY State DMV and clear NY titled vehicles for export. The reason is political and is tied to inability of the DMV (NY State) and US Customs office (Federal Government) to share information between the two systems. The NY State DMV is trying to protect the identity of illegal immigrants with NY State driver licenses and no longer shares access to its database with any Federal agencies.
This will impact vehicles leaving all ports, not just Port of NY/NJ.
We strongly advise clients to not purchase any NY titled vehicles with the intention of exporting from any US port until this situation is resolved.
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Leasing News Advisor
Steve Crane, CLFP
Steve Crane, CLFP, is an original member of the Leasing News Advisory Board from July 2000. He is Executive Vice President and the Sales Manager for BSB Leasing, which is in Colorado, however, resides and works remotely in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Prior to joining BSB in September of 2014, Steve was Vice President and Marketing Manager for the Indirect Equipment Financing Group at Bank of the West where he worked for nearly 20 years. He graduated from California State University, Sacramento with a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Finance and has held positions with numerous companies in his career, including Westinghouse Credit, Ingersoll-Rand Financial, CIT and Taylor Financial. Steve has been an active volunteer in the Leasing and Financing community over the years, holding various positions with the Certified Leasing and Finance Professional Foundation, former Eastern Association of Equipment Leasing, National Association of Equipment Leasing Brokers and National Equipment Finance Association.
Steve Crane, CLFP
Executive Vice President & Sales Manager
BSB Leasing, Inc.
7921 Southpark Plaza, Suite 208
Littleton, CO 80120
scrane@bsbleasing.com
303-376-4668
Fax: 303-329-0240
www.bsbleasing.com
Steve has been married to his wife Cheryl for 35 years and they have two sons, Ryan and Alex. Ryan is a firefighter in Northern California and Alex is in his first year of residency in Southern California with his wife Jess.
Steve, wife Cheryl, son Alex, daughter-in-law Jess and kneeling is son Ryan with the dog Murph.
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Discount Domination: Dollar Stores are Thriving in America
Smaller Stores, Convenient, Taking Over Direct Retail Sales
The wave of dollar store openings represents the biggest shift in brick and mortar retail in the past decade.
They are primarily expanding into local neighborhoods that need them.
It’s convenience as number one, with online delivery #2, as well as
Dollar Stores are also online with many offering delivery and ordering on line.
Store Locator:
https://www.dollartree.com/store-locator
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Labrador Retriever Mix
Menlo Park, California Adopt a Dog
Harry – 2-4 year-old male black Lab mix 64 pounds, neutered
FOSTER NEEDED – Harry needs a foster home while is looking for his forever adoptive home. Contact Katy (info below) if you are interested in fostering or adopting Harry.
Harry (also known as Shadow) was returned to GGLRR as his adopters decided they need a more laid back Lab for their busy lifestyle.
Background: Found in a pad-locked vacant chain-link fenced lot in Oakland… with no food or water, local authorities sprung this guy from his predicament and took him to the local shelter where no one claimed him. Initially very apprehensive and anxious at the shelter, he quickly warmed up to people.
What Harry’s original Foster says: Within two days, Harry totally settled into his new surroundings. He is one quick learner! In the house, he has learned to stay off the furniture, stay out of the kitchen when we're cooking, to sit and wait for his food, to keep out of certain rooms, and knows exactly where to find the dog toys. Fully housetrained, not a single mess inside. After a couple nights of 5 minutes of whining, he now sleeps great without a single complaint in his crate. Every morning, he greets us with loving kisses, then runs to the front door to go outside and do his business. This lovable guy hasn't chewed or damaged anything that wasn't a dog toy to play with, he is great at retrieving, he has learned to drop or release toys without stress; the guy loves belly rubs and to be close to people, and is great with our own 3-yr-old lab competing for the ball or playing tug-of-war with ropes. When walking, he has typical lab excess curiosity, but he's rapidly improving and walks great with only a little pulling, though would always stop to smell and leave a wet message if given the opportunity. When meeting other dogs (big and small) that are not on leash, he politely says hello, and then we easily continue on our way. He knows to sit, stay, release toys, and is doing great with recall. During our walks, he's been around mountain bikes, large groups of passers-by, joggers, and passing cars/trucks without getting disturbed at all. For a ~4 year old, this guy has a boatload of energy, and thrives on working/training for a treat or positive attention. A great companion for someone who loves the outdoors and playing with their dog.
What Harry’s Rescue Rep says: We think Harry is a Lab mixed with a herding breed (perhaps border collie, McNab or Australian cattle dog). Assertive and full of energy, he will need lots of exercise, mental stimulation, and leadership. Great candidate for obedience training. He is not a dog park dog (he will go after other young male dogs), but he has done well playing with and living in a home with a social female dog. We would love to see Harry in a home that has experience with young energetic male Labs and/or herding breeds. Harry needs an experienced owner that will provide strong leadership so Harry doesn’t feel like he needs to take charge. Harry is a young dog that will test limits but who also responds very well to a human who provides leadership, guidance, and structure.
Harry does great with people he knows but can be wary with strangers. We think Harry would do best in a quieter home that doesn’t have a lot of visitors coming and going. Not a good dog for a home with young children running around and/or sudden movements that can trigger herding instincts. Harry has been doing well working with our trainer and he will be an awesome dog for an active, calm assertive person who is willing to continue his training and/or manage interactions when guests come to visit. Harry is very smart and can be a truly terrific and fun dog who will be a loyal companion and deeply bond with the right owner who can provide the leadership, exercise, and mental stimulation he needs.
What our trainer says: Harry’s ideal home is with a dog savvy person that likes strong temperament energetic type pets, who would appreciate his barking at strangers who approach the home, and who is willing to put in the training or set up management for when they have guests. Harry would be happy having a yard to patrol and come in and spend time with his person when they are home. I think he would enjoy that more than trying to turn him into a city pet having to defend himself from strangers forcing their attention on him. He is not your typical outgoing Labrador who immediately loves everyone.
Medical Information: Harry is in great health and is current on Rabies and distemper vaccination, heartworm negative and microchipped. Harry has had a wellness check and was neutered by our vet. The shelter initially estimated his age as 4 or 5, we think he is younger based on his energy, demeanor, and pearly white teeth.
Harry is located in: Menlo Park.
If you are interested in Harry, contact Rescue Rep Katy at 650-796-3596 (call/text) or katy4gglrr@gmail.com
http://www.labrescue.org/labsavailable.html
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FREE WEBINAR
Finding it hard to attract the best talent?
Join us on Wednesday, February 26 at 3:00 p.m. (ET) for this lively and informative webinar based on the popular presentation offered at the 2019 AACFB Commercial Financing Expo.
Hear from several generations as they explore the myths and facts of our younger generation and discuss finding and keeping talented millennials.
Presenters:
Adrian Hebig, Channel Partners
Brandon Marshall, Quality Leasing Co.
Brenton Russel Bryn Mawr Funding
Moderator:
Sandy Olds, Channel Partners
To register and learn more, please go to:
https://myemail.constantcontact.com/WEBINAR---Attracting---Retaining-Great-Talent.html?soid=1101351616781&aid=sJM4liC9864
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News Briefs----
Powell, Warning of a Possible Virus Fallout,
Is Slammed Again by Trump
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/11/business/economy/jerome-powell-federal-reserve-coronavirus.html
Job openings in the U.S. fall to 2-year low
fell to 6.42 million at end of 2019 as hiring slowed
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/job-openings-in-the-us-fall-to-two-year-low-2020-02-11
Xerox raises HP buyout offer to $34 billion
Latest bid in acquisition saga values HP at $24 a share
https://www.forbes.com/sites/sergeiklebnikov/2020/02/10/xerox-raises-takeover-bid-for-hp-to-24-per-share/#2cbd87656c40
Judge approves controversial merger of T-Mobile and Sprint
NY Att. Gen. Calls it a "loss" for consumers
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/judge-approves-controversial-merger-mobile-sprint/story?id=68907780
Popeyes’ Sales: ‘Never Seen This Kind of Response’
System-wide sales up 42 % for 1/4/ 18.5% for the year
https://www.qsrmagazine.com/fast-food/popeyes-sales-never-seen-kind-response?utm_campaign=20200211&utm_medium=email&utm_source=jolt
Chinese Military Hackers Charged
Over Equifax Data Breach
https://www.securityweek.com/chinese-military-hackers-charged-over-equifax-data-breach
The Wall Street Journal joins The New York Times
in the 2 million digital subscriber club
https://www.niemanlab.org/2020/02/the-wall-street-journal-joins-the-new-york-times-in-the-2-million-digital-subscriber-club/
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You May Have Missed---
Pick the Bank’s Name: Trulance, Trulicity, Tru-micin,
Trulia, Tru, Truweo, or Truist for Sun Trust/BB&T Merger
https://ficinc.com/pick-the-banks-name-trulance-trulicity-tru-micin-trulia-tru-truweo-or-truist/
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Baseball
by Samplette
TIME FOR THE SEASON TO
ALMOST BE OVER.
KEEPING MY FINGERS CROSSED
EVERY NIGHT.
MAYBE WITH LUCK IT WILL
END LIKE I HOPE.
OH, I REALLY DO DOUBT THAT.
UNLESS A MIRACLE
TURNS
THINGS AROUND. THE SEASON WILL BE
OVER IN A FEW DAYS.
THEN I WILL
HAVE TO WAIT ANOTHER YEAR. TO
ENJOY WATCHING THEM PLAY.
BASEBALL IS MY FAVORITE SPORT OF THEM
ALL. EXCEPT MAYBE COLLEGE BASKETBALL. I
LOVE TO WATCH DUKE DO THEIR THING. I
LOVE THE LAST MINUTE
GOALS WHICH GIVES THEM
A WIN. BUT, CARDINAL BASEBALL IS
MY FAVORITE PASS TIME. I COULD WATCH IT
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NFL cut candidates: 13 notable players who
could be on chopping block in 2020 offseason
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/nfl/2020/02/11/nfl-cut-candidates-2020-players-cam-newton-roster/4721446002/
Improvisation: Bill Murray sinks putt
at Pebble Beach Pro-Am with a misdirection
https://www.sacbee.com/sports/golf/article240192192.html
Another win at Pebble Beach shows Kevin Streelman,
Larry Fitzgerald make formidable pro-am team
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/golf/2020/02/09/larry-fitzgerald-kevin-streelman-win-team-pro-am-pebble-beach/41188173/
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California Nuts Briefs---
California Democrat proposes ban on taxpayer-funded
stays at Trump hotels
https://www.sacbee.com/site-services/newsletters/breaking-news-alerts/article240160093.html?
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“Gimme that Wine”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJnQoi8DSE8
California Crushed About 3.9 Million Tons
of Wine grapes in 2019
https://www.winebusiness.com/news/?go=getArticle&dataId=225915
China Steals US Wine Industry as Tariffs Take
Their Toll According to U.S. Wine Trade Alliance
https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/china-steals-us-wine-industry-as-tariffs-take-their-toll-according-to-us-wine-trade-alliance-301001880.html
Free Wine App
https://www.nataliemaclean.com/mobileapp/
Wine Prices by vintage
http://www.winezap.com
http://www.wine-searcher.com/
US/International Wine Events
http://www.localwineevents.com/
Leasing News Wine & Spirits Page
http://two.leasingnews.org/Recommendations/wnensprts.htm
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This Day in History
1733 - General James Edward Oglethorpe, with some 100 other Englishmen, landed at what is now Savannah, GA. Naming the new colony Georgia for England’s King George II, Oglethorpe was organizer and first governor of the colony and founder of the city of Savannah. He proposed the establishment of an asylum for debtors in the region south of the American colony of South Carolina. The British recognized the advantages of a buffer colony between South Carolina and Spanish Florida and Oglethorpe was made a twenty-year trustee of the colony of Georgia. He carefully selected about one hundred debtors and, on January 11, 1733, the expedition sailed into South Carolina’s Charleston Bay. After purchasing supplies, Oglethorpe led the settlers down the coast to Georgia, where they traveled inland along the Savannah River, establishing the settlement of Savannah on February 12. After forging friendly relations with the Yamacraw, a branch of the Creek Confederacy who agreed to cede land to the colonists for settlement, he set about establishing a defense against the Spanish, building forts, and instituting a system of military training. In 1739, England declared war on Spain and, in 1742, Oglethorpe defeated the Spanish on St. Simons Island off the coast of Georgia, effectively ending Spanish claims to the territory of Georgia. Georgia, rich in export potential, later grew into one of the most prosperous British colonies in America.
1793 - As states in New England began outlawing slavery, the Southern states pushed through Congress the Fugitive Slave Law: “No person held to service or labor in one state, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered upon claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due.” As the Underground Railroad began, more and more states enacted statues of bounty and fines for those assisting “runaway slaves.”
1809 - Birthday of Abraham Lincoln, 16th president of the US (Mar 4, 1861-Apr 15, 1865) at Hardin County, KY. He was the first President to be assassinated (on Good Friday, Apr 14, 1865, at Ford's Theatre at Washington, DC). His presidency encompassed the tragic Civil War. Especially remembered are his Emancipation Proclamation (Jan 1, 1863), his Gettysburg Address (Nov 19, 1863) and his proclamation establishing the last Thursday of November as Thanksgiving Day. Lincoln's birthday is observed as part of Presidents' Day in most states, but is a legal holiday in Illinois and an optional bank holiday in Iowa, Maryland, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Washington and West Virginia.
1809 – Charles Robert Darwin (d. 1882), born Shrewsbury, England. Prolific author, naturalist and geologist best remembered as the author of “The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life” and “The Descent of Man,” among several.
1825 - The Creek cede the last of their lands in Georgia to the United States government by the Treaty of Indian Springs and migrate west.
1831 - Nat Turner's revolt in Virginia begins with divine signal -- solar eclipse. He decides the only way to be free is to revolt and sees this as a sign to raise an army of salves.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part3/3p1518.html
1837 - Birthday of artist Thomas Moran (d. 1926), Bolton, England.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/feb12.html
1837 - An irate group of unemployed New Yorkers gathered to protest skyrocketing food and fuel prices, as well as the city's rapidly escalating rents. The demonstration quickly degenerated into violence, as the workers turned their anger on a flour warehouse. For the city, as well as the rest of the nation, the outburst was a strong indicator of the fiscal troubles that would bubble over later that year. Come that May, a host of events, including a wave of bank failures and a brewing recession, both of which stemmed from President Andrew Jackson's decision to yank all Federal deposits from the Second Bank of the United States, signaled the onset of the Panic of 1837. The panic hung over America for the next seven years, debilitating the nation's economy and triggering rampant unemployment.
1850 – The original manuscript of George Washington's Farewell Address sold for $2,300.
1855 – Michigan State University was founded.
1863 - Coronation on territory that would later become part of the United States: King Kalakaua and Queen Kapiolani were crowned king and queen of the Hawaiian Islands at Iolani Palace, Honolulu.
1865 - Reverend Dr. Henry Highland Garnet, the first African-American ever permitted in the US House of Representatives, delivers a sermon to a crowded House chamber. His sermon commemorates the victories of the Union army and the deliverance of the country from slavery. Garnet, a former slave himself, was a pastor of the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C. President Abraham Lincoln, with the unanimous consent of his cabinet and the two congressional chaplains, had arranged for the special Sunday service, to be held on February 12, the president’s fifty-sixth birthday. Garnet escaped to the North in 1824, where he became a prominent abolitionist, famous for his radical appeal to slaves to rise up and slay their masters. In 1881, he was appointed US minister to Liberia, but he died only two months after his arrival in the African nation.
1870 - The women in the Utah Territory were granted the right to vote in political elections---50 years before the 19th Amendment was ratified.
1873 - A routine coinage act of Congress omitted all silver currency because silver was so scarce it brought more as bullion than as dollars. Three years later, when Nevada mines were producing unprecedented quantities of silver, mine owners demanded that the government buy their product for coinage. At that time, the Coinage Act became known as the Crime of '73 as all coins were gold.
1874 - King David Kalakaua of Sandwich Island HI, became the first king to visit US.
1874 – Albert G. Spalding opened his sporting goods store. He was a pitcher, manager, and executive in the early years of professional baseball. He played Major League baseball between 1871 and 1878. In 1874, while Spalding was playing and organizing the National League, Spalding and his brother Walter began the sporting goods store in Chicago, which grew rapidly (14 stores by 1901) and expanded into a manufacturer and distributor of all kinds of sporting equipment. The company became "synonymous with sporting goods" and is still a going concern. Spalding published the first official rules guide for baseball. In it he stated that only Spalding balls could be used (previously, the quality of the balls used had been subpar). Spalding also founded the "Baseball Guide," which at the time was the most widely read baseball publication.
1877 - The first telephone news dispatch was called into the Boston Globe in Boston from Salem, Massachusetts, using equipment provided by Alexander Graham Bell.
1878 - Frederick W. Thayer of Waverly, MA, captain of the Harvard University Baseball Club, obtained a patent for a “face guard or safety mask.” He had a tinsmith in Cambridge, MA make it. Louis Truschke, catcher of the Foster Baseball Club, Lawrence, MA, who had been hurt by a pitched ball, adopted the mask. It became very popular among catchers and was eventually manufactured by Peck and Snyder, New York City.
1879 - A gala carnival was present at the opening of the first indoor ice skating rink, built by Thomas L. Rankin at Madison Square Garden, New York. It had 6,000 square feet of surface.
1880 - John L. Lewis (d. 1969), American labor leader, was born near Lucas, IA. His parents came to the US from Welsh mining towns and Lewis left school in the seventh grade to become a miner himself. He became leader of United Mine Workers of America and champion of all miners' causes.
1893 – Gen. Omar Bradley (d. 1981) was born in Randolph County, MO. Gen. Bradley saw distinguished service in North Africa and Western Europe during World War II and later became General of the Army. From the Normandy landings through the end of World War II, Bradley commanded all U.S. ground forces invading Germany from the west; he ultimately commanded forty-three divisions and 1.3 million men, the largest body of American soldiers ever to serve under a single U.S. field commander. After the war, Bradley headed the Veterans Administration and became Army Chief of Staff. In 1949, Bradley was appointed the first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the following year oversaw the policy-making for the Korean War, before retiring from active service in 1953. Bradley was the last of only nine people to hold a five-star rank in the US Armed Forces.
1898 - Roy Harris (d. 1979) was born at Chandler, OK. Harris was one of the most important composers of the 20th century. He was known for his use of Anglo-American folk tunes, composing more than 200 works, including 13 symphonies, several ballet scores and much chamber and choral music. His best-known work is his “Third Symphony” (1939).
1899 - On the edge of the greatest arctic outbreak of all-time, a vicious blizzard pounded the mid-Atlantic and New England states. 20 inches of snow fell at Washington, DC and 34 inches fell at Cape May, New Jersey. The central pressure of the storm was estimated to be 966 millibars (28.53 inches) just southeast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. It was the coldest morning ever in the eastern Great Plains and eastern Texas. Kansas City, Missouri bottomed out at 22 degrees below zero. Fort Worth, Texas dropped to 8 degrees below. Camp Clarke, Nebraska recorded 47 degrees below zero. In the east, Washington, DC recorded 15 degrees below zero and Charleston, South Carolina received 3.9 inches of snow.
1900 - Birthday of guitarist Pink Anderson (d. 1974), Laurens, SC. http://www.io.com/~tbone1/blues/ECblz/pinkan.html
http://www.oafb.net/once107.html
http://www.wirz.de/music/andepfrm.htm
1903 - Birthday of Milton Rackmil (d. 1992), co-founder Decca records and president of Universal Studios, New York City.
http://www.carygrant.net/autobiography/autobiography7.html
http://archives.studio.universalstudios.com/timeline1959.html
(see 1951-- http://archives.studio.universalstudios.com/smallframe4.html)
1904 – Ted Mack (d. 1976) was born William Edward Maguiness in Greeley, CO. He was the host of “Ted Mack and the Original Amateur Hour” on radio and television. The show began on radio in 1934 as “Major Bowes’ Amateur Hour” and ran until 1946 when Major Bowes died. Mack, a talent scout who had directed the show under Bowes, revived it in 1948 for ABC Radio and the DuMont Television Network. It lasted on radio until 1952 and until 1970 on television, where it ran on all four major networks, Winners who went on to show business careers included singers Gladys Knight, Ann-Margret, Pat Boone, Raul Julia, Teresa Brewer and Irene Cara.
1907 – Anna T. Jeanes bequeaths $1,000,000 to the Jeanes Supervisors. Anna T. Jeanes, a Quaker from Philadelphia, was one of ten children in a wealthy family. She was a well-to-do single woman in the 1800s who was interested in the causes of her day. None of her brothers and sisters left heirs. Over time, she inherited a great deal of money. Around the turn of the century, she began to donate her fortune to charity, and in 1907, shortly before she died, she gave one million dollars to a fund of income-bearing securities, to provide education to black students in rural areas of the South. This fund, based on an original gift of over a million dollars, was set up for the improvement of rural elementary schools for African Americans. Jeanes teachers were hired to travel to all the schools in a county, helping the local teachers organize classes in domestic science, gardening and carpentry.
The Jeanes teachers contributed to the schools in other ways, often serving as informal social workers. For thirty years they provided a precious ingredient, hope, to small black communities. In 1937, the Jeanes Fund merged with the Slater Fund to found the Southern Education Foundation, which has continued to do much good work. She is buried at Fair Hill Burial Ground at Germantown Avenue and Cambria Street, Philadelphia.
http://www.fairhillburial.org/famous.php
1908 - The famous New York-to-Paris automobile race started via Seattle and Yokohama, Japan. The race began in Times Square, New York City, with six automobiles entered in the race: three French, one Italian, One German, and one American. The race was won by George Schuster, driver, George J. Miller, mechanic, and Montague Roberts, assistant mechanic, in a car made by the E.R. Thomas Motor Company, Buffalo, NY. The cars drove across the North American continent, took a boat across the Pacific and then raced across Siberia and Europe to the City of Lights. One car dropped out on the starting day; after a while, only two remained. The average daily run was 152 miles, the longest daily run 420 miles. A team of Americans reached Paris on July 31, four days after a German team, but the Americans were declared the winners because of a handicap imposed on the Germans. The Americans traveled 13,341 miles in 170 days, 88 of which was spent driving. The race was sponsored by the New York Times and the Paris newspaper Le Matin.
Second entry:
http://www.springvillechamber.com/Historical_Society/favorite_sons.htm
http://www.thegreatautorace.com/update.htm
1909 - On the 100th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, a call for an organizational meeting was issued for what was to become the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was founded by W.E.B. Dubois and Ida Wells-Barnett, with 58 others, to wage a militant campaign against lynching and other forms of racial oppression. Its legal wing brought many lawsuits that successfully challenged segregation in the 1950s and '60s. Today, the membership of the NAACP exceeds 500,000.
http://www.naacp.org/
1910 - Birthday of tenor sax player Paul Bascomb (d. 1986), Birmingham, AL
http://www.alamhof.org/bascombp.htm
http://www.hoyhoy.com/bascomb.htm
1913 - Raymond “Ray” Dandridge (d. 1974), Baseball Hall of Fame third baseman, was born at Richmond, VA. Dandridge was a standout in the Negro Leagues and was 35 years old when the Majors called, but he never played a day in the Major Leagues. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1987.
1913 - Mary Harris "Mother" Jones leads a protest of conditions in the West Virginia mines and is arrested. On May 8, newly-elected Governor Hatfield releases her from jail. A government official once called Mary Jones "The most dangerous woman in America." She was dangerous to the established order because she was fearless in her defense of the oppressed working class. For 60 years, she went into mining towns where men often feared to go, organizing unions. The miners called her "Mother" Jones. She was still out there at age 83.
“No rockin' chair for her...God, if You had but the moon
Stuck in Your cap for a lamp,
Even You'd tire of it soon,
Down in the dark and the damp.
Nothing but blackness above
And nothing that moves but the cars. . . .
God, if You wish for our love,
Fling us a handful of stars.”
---Louis Untermeyer
excerpt from “Caliban in the Coal Mines,” from Challenge, 1914
(This poem is based on the Few Clothes Johnson character played by James Earle Jones in John Sayles' film “Matewan”).
UMWA miners in Paint Creek in Kanawha County demanded wages equal to those of other area mines. The operators rejected the wage increase and miners walked off the job today, beginning one of the most violent strikes in the nation's history. At the age of 83, Mother Jones was convicted by a military court of conspiring to commit murder and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. The event created such a furor that the U.S. Senate formed a committee to look into conditions in the West Virginia coalfields.
http://www.kentlaw.edu/ilhs/majones.htm
http://www.meetingground.org/loavfish/lf599/motherjones.htm
http://www.johnshepler.com/articles/mojo.html
http://www.feminista.com/v3n8/cruey.html
1914 – The first stone for the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC was put into place.
1914 - Birthday of Gordon Lee “Tex” Beneke (d. 2000), Fort Worth, TX. Saxophonist, singer, and bandleader, his career is a history of associations with bandleader Glenn Miller and former musicians and singers who worked with Miller. Beneke also solos on the recording the Glenn Miller Orchestra made of their popular song “Kalamazoo” and sings on another popular Glenn Miller recording, "Chattanooga Choo Choo." Jazz critic Will Friedwald considers Beneke to be one of the major blues singers who sang with the big bands of the early 1940s.
http://elvispelvis.com/texbeneke.htm
http://elvispelvis.com/texbeneke.htm#bio
http://www.bigbands.net/int-TexBeneke.html
1915 - Birthday of Lorne Greene (d. 1987) in Ontario, Canada. He was the actor who played Ben Cartwright on the immensely popular and long-running television western “Bonanza.” An only child, Greene later said he based his portrayal of Ben Cartwright on his own father, Daniel Greene. Greene’s rise to national stardom in “Bonanza” did not come until relatively late in his career. For several years he worked in the theater in New York City, but he won his first major position in 1939 as an announcer for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. His deep, warm voice soon earned Greene the title, "The Voice of Canada." During World War II, he served as a flying officer in the Royal Canadian Air Force. When he returned to Canada, Greene began to win more acting roles in the fledgling Canadian television industry. Greene’s big break came in 1959. The American TV producer David Dortot spotted Greene playing a small role in the television western series “Wagon Train.” Dortot was in the midst of creating a new TV Western based on the adventures of a rancher father and his three sons. He thought Greene would be perfect for the role of "Pa" - Ben Cartwright. Greene agreed to take the role. His three TV sons (each by a different wife) were the thoughtful and mature Adam (Pernell Roberts), the gentle giant Hoss (Dan Blocker), and the hot-blooded young romantic, Little Joe (Michael Landon). “Bonanza” debuted on NBC in 1959 and remained on the air until 1973, making it one of the longest-running TV Westerns ever. Somewhat unique among the many other TV Westerns of the time in that it emphasized solitary cowboys and gunmen, “Bonanza” focused on the strong familial bonds between Ben Cartwright and his three sons. The silver-haired Greene created a Ben Cartwright who was an ideal father. Strong, compassionate, and understanding, "Pa" shepherded his sons through tough times with a grace and wisdom that won him the affection of millions of viewers. Besides offering appealing characters and interesting story lines, “Bonanza” was also popular because it was the first network Western to be televised in color. After “Bonanza” was canceled in 1973, Greene acted in several other short-lived TV shows, including “Battlestar Galactica.” He died in 1987 at the age of 72, still best remembered by millions as "Pa" Cartwright.
1917 - Birthday of Dominic “Dom” DiMaggio (d. 2009), Boston Red Sox center fielder of the 1940s, early 1950s, in San Francisco, Ca. He was the youngest of three DiMaggio brothers who each became Major League center fielders, compiling a lifetime.298 batting average while playing in the large shadow of older brother Joe. Often forgotten is his role in the final game of the 1946 World Series involving the Cardinals’ Enos Slaughter’s ‘Mad Dash’ to score the winning run from first. With two out in the eighth inning of Game 7, DiMaggio doubled to drive in two runs, tying the score 3-3 but he pulled his hamstring coming into second base and had to be removed for a pinch runner. The Cardinals’ Harry Walker doubled to center field in the bottom of the inning, scoring Slaughter from first base to win the game and Series for St. Louis. Had DiMaggio remained in the game, Walker's hit might have been catchable, or the outfielder's strong arm might have held Slaughter to third base. “If they hadn’t taken DiMaggio out of the game,” Slaughter later said of his daring sprint, “I wouldn’t have tried it.”
1923 - Birthday of drummer Art Mardigan (d. 1977), Detroit, MI.
http://www.drummerworld.com/drummers/Art_Mardigan.html
http://www.jazzvalley.com/musician/art.mardigan
http://www.ipl.org.ar/exhibit/detjazz/BlBiSlSh7.html
1924 - Bandleader Paul Whiteman presented his symphonic jazz at New York's Aeolian Hall. The concert was the first public performance of George Gershwin’s "Rhapsody in Blue" with Gershwin, himself, at the piano.
1924 - Calvin Coolidge, known as the ‘Silent President,’ gave the first presidential political speech on radio from New York City. The speech was broadcast on five radio stations and some five million people tuned in to hear the President.
1925 - The Arbitration law was enacted by Congress: “...to make valid and enforceable written provisions or agreements for arbitration of disputes, arising out of contracts, maritime transactions or commerce among the state or Territories or with foreign nations.”
1926 - Trumpet player Buddy Childers (d. 2007) was born in St. Louis, Missouri.
http://www.theiceberg.com/artist/27676/buddy_childers.html
http://www.callet.com/buddy.htm
http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/childers_buddy/albums.jhtml
1926 - Birthday of Joe Garagiola (d. 2016), broadcaster and former baseball player, St. Louis, Mo. He grew in the Italian-American neighborhood known as The Hill, just across the street from his childhood friend and competitor, Yogi Berra. Garagiola turned to broadcasting following his retirement as a mediocre player, first calling Cardinals radio broadcasts. As an announcer, Garagiola is best known for his almost 30-year association with NBC television. Besides calling baseball games for NBC, Garagiola served as a panelist on “The Today Show” from 1967 to 1973 and again from 1990 to 1992. He also occasionally guest-hosted “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson,” including the only live appearances of any members of The Beatles on the program while still a group (Lennon and McCartney were the guests in May 1968).
1926 – TV quiz show contestant Charles Van Doren (d. 2019) was born in NYC. In 1959, he testified before Congress that he had been given the correct answers by the producers of the show “Twenty One.” Producers Dan Enright and Albert Freedman approached him, thinking the youthful Columbia teacher would be the man to defeat their incumbent “Twenty One champion, Herb Stempel, and boost the show's slowing ratings as Stempel's reign continued. In January, 1957, Van Doren entered a winning streak that ultimately earned him more than $129,000 and made him famous, including an appearance on the cover of “TIME” on February 11, 1957. His “Twenty One” run ended on March 11, when he lost to Vivienne Nearing, a lawyer whose husband Van Doren had previously beaten. After his defeat, he was offered a three-year contract with NBC. When allegations of cheating were first raised, by Stempel and others, Van Doren denied any wrongdoing, saying, "It's silly and distressing to think that people don't have more faith in quiz shows." As the investigation by the district attorney's office and eventually US Congress progressed, Van Doren, now host on “The Today Show,” was under pressure from NBC to testify, and went into hiding in order to avoid the committee's subpoena. It was another former Twenty-One contestant, an artist named James Snodgrass, who would finally provide indisputable corroborating proof that the show had been rigged. Snodgrass had documented every answer he was coached on in a series of registered letters he mailed to himself prior to the show being taped. One month after the hearings began, Van Doren emerged from hiding and confessed before the committee that he had been complicit in the fraud.
1931 – “Dracula” starring Bela Lugosi premiered at the Roxy Theater in NYC.
1932 – George M. Weiss became head of the New York Yankees farm system. Weiss eventually became the general manager of the Yankees, and along with manager Casey Stengel, oversaw an unprecedented five consecutive World Series championships from 1949-53. During his tenure (1948-60), the club won ten pennants and seven World Series. After leaving the Yankees, he was the first president and general manager of the New York Mets. Weiss was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1971.
1934 - Birthday of basketball Hall of Fame Boston Celtics center and former coach William Felton “Bill” Russell, West Monroe, LA. Russell played for the Celtics from 1956 to 1969. A five-time NBA MVP and a twelve-time All-Star, he was the centerpiece of the Celtics dynasty, winning 11 NBA championships during his thirteen-year career. He coached the Celtics from 1966-69, winning two NBA championships before leaving to coach Seattle and Sacramento. With Henri Richard of the NHL Montreal Canadiens, Russell holds the record for the most championships won by an athlete in a North American sports league. Before his professional career, Russell led the University of San Francisco to two consecutive NCAA championships (1955, 1956). He also won a gold medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics as captain of the US National basketball team. Russell is widely considered one of the best players in NBA history.
http://www.geocities.com/dblimbrick/russell.html
http://www.nba.com/history/russell_bio.html
1935 - Great airship, USS Macon, crashes into Pacific Ocean.
1935 - Birthday of singer/song composer Gene McDaniels (d. 2011), Kansas City, MO. He teamed with producer Snuff Garrett, with whom he recorded his first hit, “A Hundred pounds of Clay” which reached number 3 in the Billboard Hot 100 Chart in early 1961 and sold over one million copies, earning gold disc status. Its follow-up, "A Tear," was less successful but his third single with Garrett, "Tower of Strength,” co-written by Burt Bacharach, reached number 5 and won McDaniels his second gold record. http://www.tsimon.com/mcdaniel.htm
1935 - Birthday of Ray Manzarek (d. 2013), keyboards player with the Doors, was born in Chicago. Manzarek met Doors' lead singer Jim Morrison at the UCLA film department and together they conceived the group which was to become famous as much for Morrison's exhibitionism as for its music. The Doors, with Robby Krieger on guitar and John Densmore on drums, had a number-one hit with "Light My Fire," a song taken from their debut album in 1967. Several more hit singles and albums followed, until Jim Morrison's death of heart failure in 1971. Ray Manzarek took the band on to record two more albums, but the Doors split up in 1973.
1938 – Birthday of Judy Blume, born Judith Sussman, Elizabeth, NJ. Breakthrough author of realistic books for children.
http://www.edupaperback.org/authorbios/Blume_Judy.html
http://www.judyblume.com/
http://www.januarymagazine.com/profiles/blume.html amseyil/blume.htm
1940 - Mutual Radio first broadcast the comic-strip hero, "Superman." For six years the identity of the man from Krypton was unknown to listeners. Eventually word got out that Superman’s voice was that of Bud Collyer, who later hosted the television programs, "To Tell the Truth" and “Beat the Clock” on CBS.
1942 - On Decca Records, Mildred Bailey recorded "More Than You Know."
1944 - Wendell Wilkie (R) enters presidential race. He had been talked into running against FDR in 1940, and was more sincere in this race; however, the Republicans had become more interested in the conservative Governor Thomas Dewey from New York. He had several heart attacks, finally succumbed, dying on October 8, 1944 at age fifty-two. FDR was reelected president on November 7, beating Gov. Dewey 25,602,504 to 22,006,285; electoral votes 432 to 99.
http://www.gwu.edu/~erpapers/abouteleanor/q-and-a/glossary/wilkie-wendell.htm
1945 - San Francisco was selected for site of UN Conference.
1945 - DELEAU, EMILE, JR., Medal of Honor
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company A, 142d Infantry, 36th Infantry Division. Place and date: Oberhoffen, France, 12 February 1945. Entered service at: Blaine, Ohio. Birth: Lansing, Ohio. G.O. No.: 60, 25 July 1945. Citation: He led a squad in the night attack on Oberhoffen, France, where fierce house-to-house fighting took place. After clearing 1 building of opposition, he moved his men toward a second house from which heavy machinegun fire came. He courageously exposed himself to hostile bullets and, firing his submachine gun as he went, advanced steadily toward the enemy position until close enough to hurl grenades through a window, killing 3 Germans and wrecking their gun. His progress was stopped by heavy rifle and machinegun fire from another house. Sgt. Deleau dashed through the door with his gun blazing. Within, he captured 10 Germans. The squad then took up a position for the night and awaited daylight to resume the attack. At dawn of 2 February Sgt. Deleau pressed forward with his unit, killing 2 snipers as he advanced to a point where machinegun fire from a house barred the way. Despite vicious small-arms fire, Sgt. Deleau ran across an open area to reach the rear of the building, where he destroyed 1 machinegun and killed its 2 operators with a grenade. He worked to the front of the structure and located a second machinegun. Finding it impossible to toss a grenade into the house from his protected position, he fearlessly moved away from the building and was about to hurl his explosive when he was instantly killed by a burst from the gun he sought to knock out. With magnificent courage and daring aggressiveness, Sgt. Deleau cleared 4 well-defended houses of Germans, inflicted severe losses on the enemy and at the sacrifice of his own life aided his battalion to reach its objective with a minimum of casualties.
1946 – Army veteran Isaac Woodard, an African-American, was severely beaten by a South Carolina police officer to the point of losing his vision in both eyes. The incident later galvanizes the Civil Rights Movement and partially inspires Orson Welles’ film “Touch of Evil.”
1947 - Top Hits
“For Sentimental Reasons” - Nat King Cole
“Ole Buttermilk Sky” - The Kay Kyser Orchestra (vocal: Mike Douglas & The Campus Kids)
“A Gal in Calico” - Johnny Mercer
“So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed” - Merle Travis
1950 - Genesis guitarist Steve Hackett was born in England. Hackett joined the group in 1970, after their first album had been released in Britain. Under the leadership of Peter Gabriel, Genesis was an art-rock band with an elaborate stage show and a dedicated cult following. But after Gabriel left in 1975, the band gained a wider audience with singer Phil Collins up front. By the time Genesis gained its first gold album, "And Then There Were Three," in 1978, Steve Hackett had left for a solo career.
1952 - LONG, CHARLES R., Medal of Honor
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company M, 38th Infantry Regiment, 2d Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Hoengsong, Korea, 12 February 1951. Entered service at: Kansas City, Mo. Born: 10 December 1923, Kansas City, Mo. G.O. No.: 18, 1 February 1952. Citation: Sgt. Long, a member of Company M, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty in action against an armed enemy of the United Nations. When Company M, in a defensive perimeter on Hill 300, [Korean War??] was viciously attacked by a numerically superior hostile force at approximately 0300 hours and ordered to withdraw, Sgt. Long, a forward observer for the mortar platoon, voluntarily remained at his post to provide cover by directing mortar fire on the enemy. Maintaining radio contact with his platoon, Sgt. Long coolly directed accurate mortar fire on the advancing foe. He continued firing his carbine and throwing hand grenades until his position was surrounded and he was mortally wounded. Sgt. Long's inspirational, valorous action halted the onslaught, exacted a heavy toll of enemy casualties, and enabled his company to withdraw, reorganize, counterattack, and regain the hill strongpoint. His unflinching courage and noble self-sacrifice reflect the highest credit on himself and are in keeping with the honored traditions of the military service.
http://www.singers.com/jazz/vintage/mcguire.html
http://www.webfitz.com/lyrics/Lyrics/1955/101955.html1954 – Lyons’ LEO software produced a payroll report. It is the first time in history a computer is used in business.
1955 - McGuire Sisters' "Sincerely" single goes to #1 and stays for 10 weeks
1955 - Top Hits
“Sincerely” - McGuire Sisters
“Hearts of Stone” - Fontane Sisters
“Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So)” - Perry Como
“Let Me Go, Lover!” - Hank Snow
1955 – U.S. agrees to train the South Vietnamese Army. President Dwight Eisenhower sends first US advisors to South Vietnam.
1956 - Rock 'n' roll eccentric Screamin' Jay Hawkins recorded "I Put a Spell on You" for Okeh records, which became his best-known song. He toured with revues organized by disc jockey Alan Freed and often concluded his act by being carried off in a flaming coffin. He died Feb 13, 2000.
http://ohiobio.org/hawkins.htm
http://www.roadhouseblues.com/biopages/bioScreaminJ.htm
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Lot/3001/
http://www.salon.com/people/obit/2000/02/18/hawkins/
1957 - No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “Too Much,'' Elvis Presley. The song is the first of four Presley songs to hit No. 1 in 1957, matching his 1956 record.
1957 - The Coasters recorded "Young Blood," a tune written by two white songwriters and independent record producers, Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller. It became the first big hit for the group. The flip side, "Searchin'," was also popular.
1958 - Argo Records releases the Monotones' doo wop classic, "Book of Love" backed with "You Never." Rising to the Top Five on both the pop and R&B charts, "Book of Love" will be the only success for the vocal sextet from Newark, New Jersey, who built their song on the jingle from a Pepsodent toothpaste commercial.
1959 - Carl Sandburg, poet/socialist, addresses joint session of the US Congress on 150th anniversary of Lincoln's birthday.
http://carl-sandburg.com/
1960 - Pat Boone earns a gold LP for "Pat's Great Hits."
http://www.tsimon.com/boone.htm
http://www.patsgold.com/index.php3?Pats_Session=31adaca78d47
28b7d79b6947164a0a1d
1960 - A snowstorm in the Deep South produced more than a foot of snow in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
1961 - "Shop Around" by the Miracles became the first million-seller for Motown Records.
1962 - Bus boycott starts in Macon, GA.
http://www.ibiblio.org/uncpress/chapters/burns_daybreak.html
1962 - No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “Duke of Earl,'' Gene Chandler. The song is the first million-selling record for Vee Jay Records.
1963 - Top Hits
“Hey Paula” - Paul & Paula
“Loop De Loop” - Johnny Thunder
“Up on the Roof” - The Drifters
“The Ballad of Jed Clampett” - Flatt & Scruggs
1963 – Construction began on the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. It was competed in 1965.
1964 - The Beatles ended a successful American tour by playing two concerts at Carnegie Hall in New York City.
1965 – Brett Kavanaugh, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, was born in Washington, DC.
1966 - Rock For Peace at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, California, with The Great Society, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Big Brother & the Holding Company. Benefit for Democratic congressional candidates and the Viet Nam Study Group. Meanwhile, it's Lincoln's Birthday Party with Sopwith Camel at the Firehouse, former quarters of Engine Co. 26 & Truck Co. 10, 3767 Sacramento St. The Charlatans also appeared.
http://www.peacerock.com/
http://www.stores.ebay.com/peacerockposters
http://bayarea.citysearch.com/profile/900590/
http://www.sopwithcamel.com/history.html
1966 - The Rolling Stones fly to New York to tape an appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show," for the following evening.
1967 - Benefit at the Fillmore for the Council for Civic Unity. Moby Grape and Sly & the Family Stone perform.
http://www.classicbands.com/sly.html
http://www.slystone.com/
http://www.warr.org/grape.html
http://www.mobygrape.net/index2.html
1968 - Jimi Hendrix returns home to Seattle where he plays for the students of Garfield High School (from which he dropped out) and receives a key to the city.
http://www.cd-bootleg.com/Jimi_Hendrix.htm
1968 - Ramparts published Eldridge Cleaver's “Soul on Ice.”
1970 - Joseph L. Searles becomes the first Black member of the New York
Stock Exchange.
http://www.nyse.com/about/records.html
1971 - Top Hits
“Knock Three Times” - Dawn
“One Bad Apple” - The Osmonds
“Rose Garden” - Lynn Anderson
“Joshua” - Dolly Parton
1972 - Al Green’s "Let’s Stay Together" took the top spot from "American Pie" on the music charts. The record stayed at #1 for one week, before Nilsson’s "Without You" knocked it out. On October 18, 1974, a girlfriend of Green assaulted him before committing suicide at his Memphis home. Although she was already married, she became upset when Green refused to marry her. At some point during the evening, White doused Green with a pan of boiling grits while he was bathing, causing severe burns on Green's back, stomach and arms. She then found his .38 and killed herself. In her purse, police found a note declaring her intentions and her reasons. Green cited the incident as a wake-up call to change his life. He became an ordained pastor of the Full Gospel Tabernacle in Memphis in 1976. In 1979, Green injured himself falling off the stage while performing in Cincinnati and interpreted this as a message from God. He then concentrated his energies towards pastoring his church and gospel singing. Green recorded 14 hit songs, six of which made it to the Top 10.
1973 - The release of U.S. POWs begins in Hanoi as part of the Paris peace settlement. The return of U.S. POWs began when North Vietnam released 142 of 591 U.S. prisoners at Hanoi's Gia Lam Airport. Part of what was called Operation Homecoming, the first 20 POWs arrived to a heroes’ welcome at Travis Air Force Base in California on February 14. Operation Homecoming was completed on March 29, 1973, when the last of 591 U.S. prisoners were released and returned to the United States.
1973 - Metric distance markers were put up by the Ohio Department of Transportation, the first state to do so, on Interstate 71 between Cincinnati and Columbus and between Columbus and Cleveland. The signs showed the distance in both miles and kilometers.
1974 - LaBelle played the unofficial opening concert for the legendary New York club the Bottom Line. The headliner for the official opening the next night was Dr. John. Stevie Wonder and Johnny Winter joined him for a jam session.
1975 – “The Stepford Wives,” starring Katharine Ross, a film about women in a small town being turned into passive robots, opened to theaters.
1977 - Barbra Streisand's soundtrack album “A Star Is Born” hits #1
1979 - Top Hits
“Da Ya Think I’m Sexy?” - Rod Stewart
“Y.M.C.A.” - Village People
“A Little More Love” - Olivia Newton-John
“Every Which Way But Loose” - Eddie Rabbitt
1981 - A contract violation by the Boston Red Sox makes All-Star catcher Carlton Fisk a free agent. In 1980, he batted .289 with 18 home runs and 62 RBI. Fisk will eventually sign a multi-year contract with the Chicago White Sox, for whom he will play during the balance of his career. Fisk is best known for "waving fair" his game-winning home run in the 12th inning of Game 6 of the 1975 World Series. At the time of his retirement in 1993, he held the record for most home runs all-time by a catcher with 351 (since passed by Mike Piazza). Fisk held the record for most games played at the position of catcher (2,226) until he was surpassed by Ivan Rodriguez. Fisk still holds the American League record for most years served behind the plate (24). Fisk was voted to the All-Star team 11 times. Fisk was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2000.
1985 – Johnny Carson surprised “Tonight Show” viewers and live audience members by shaving his beard. Carson joked: “I had to do it when a little old lady said that she had confused me for one of the Smith Brothers.” The studio audience was silent, until Johnny, timing it perfectly said, “You know, the cough drop guys.” Laughter.
1986 – No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “How Will I Know,’’ Whitney Houston. The song displaces “That’s What Friends Are For,’’ the No. 1 song by Houston’s cousin, Dionne Warwick.
1987 – Top Hits
“Open Your Heart” – Madonna
“Livin’ on a Prayer” – Bon Jovi
“Change of Heart” – Cyndi Lauper
“Leave Me Lonely” – Gary Morris
1988 – A big east coast storm dumped heavy snow across New York and New England. Snowfall totals included 26.1 inches at Camden, New York, 26 inches at Chester, Massachusetts, and 24 inches at Berlin, New Hampshire and Rochester, Vermont.
1989 - Tiny Tim declares himself a New York City mayoral candidate.
http://www.tinytim.org/
1990 - Sting, Bruce Springsteen, Paul Simon and Don Henley performed at a benefit in Beverly Hills, California for the Rainforest Foundation. More than $1 million was collected from such celebrities as Don Johnson, Billy Crystal, Barbra Streisand and Goldie Hawn to save the Amazon rain forests and the Indians who live there.
1992 - Sharon Kowalski finally went home. After an eight-year battle to gain custody of her life partner who was badly injured in an accident, Karen Thompson was named Sharon's guardian and took her home. Karen had fought for the right of guardianship claiming Sharon's father - who would have nothing to do with her before the accident - only gave her warehousing and custodial care on the money awarded Sharon for her accident, and insufficient medical care. Karen showed that because of the lack of physical therapy Sharon's muscles were shortening thereby crippling her further. And Sharon, though brain damaged, made it clear she wanted to go with Karen. In the decision, the Minnesota Court of Appeals said that the women were "...a family of affinity which ought to be respected."
1994 - Celine Dion became the first Quebec artist to top the Billboard Hot 100 chart when "The Power of Love" made number-one.
1997 - Fred Goldman, father of the slain Ron Goldman, says he will settle for a signed murder confession from O J Simpson in lieu of his $20.5 million judgment.
http://www.cnn.com/US/9702/12/simpson/index.html
1998 - The handwritten lyrics to Elton John's funeral tribute to Princess Diana, the revised balled "Candle in the Wind 1997," sold for $442,500 at a Beverly Hills auction benefiting the Princess's charities. The lyrics were revised from the 1970's hit tribute to Marilyn Monroe, and were both written by Elton's longtime collaborator, Bernie Taupin.
1999 - President Bill Clinton is found “not guilty” in breaking any Federal laws. The five-week impeachment trial of Bill Clinton comes to an end, with the Senate voting to acquit the president on both articles of impeachment: perjury and obstruction of justice. In November, 1995, Clinton began an affair with Monica Lewinsky, a 21-year-old unpaid intern. Over the course of a year and a half, the president and Lewinsky had nearly a dozen sexual encounters in the White House. In April, 1996, Lewinsky was transferred to the Pentagon. That summer, she first confided in Pentagon co-worker Linda Tripp about her sexual relationship with the president. In 1997, with the relationship over, Tripp began secretly to record conversations with Lewinsky, in which Lewinsky gave Tripp details about the affair. In December, lawyers for Paula Jones, who was suing the president on sexual harassment charges, subpoenaed Lewinsky. In January, 1998, allegedly under the recommendation of the President, Lewinsky filed an affidavit in which she denied ever having had a sexual relationship with him. Five days later, Tripp contacted the office of Kenneth Starr, the Whitewater independent counsel, to talk about Lewinsky and the tapes she made of their conversations. Tripp, wired by FBI agents working with Starr, met with Lewinsky again, and on January 16, Lewinsky was taken by FBI agents and U.S. attorneys to a hotel room where she was questioned and offered immunity if she cooperated with the prosecution. A few days later, the story broke, and Clinton publicly denied the allegations, saying, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky." In late July, lawyers for Lewinsky and Starr worked out a full-immunity agreement covering both Lewinsky and her parents, all of whom Starr had threatened with prosecution. On August 6, Lewinsky appeared before the grand jury to begin her testimony, and on August 17, President Clinton testified. Contrary to his testimony in the Paula Jones sexual-harassment case, President Clinton acknowledged to prosecutors from the office of the independent counsel that he had had an extramarital affair with Ms. Lewinsky. In four hours of closed-door testimony, conducted in the Map Room of the White House, Clinton spoke live via closed-circuit television to a grand jury in a nearby federal courthouse. He was the first sitting president ever to testify before a grand jury investigating his conduct. That evening, President Clinton also gave a four-minute televised address to the nation in which he admitted he had engaged in an inappropriate relationship with Lewinsky. In the brief speech, which was wrought with legalisms, the word "sex" was never spoken, and the word "regret" was used only in reference to his admission that he misled the public and his family. Less than a month later, on September 9, Kenneth Starr submitted his report and 18 boxes of supporting documents to the House of Representatives. Released to the public two days later, the Starr Report outlined a case for impeaching Clinton on 11 grounds, including perjury, obstruction of justice, witness-tampering, and abuse of power, and also provided explicit details of the sexual relationship between the president and Ms. Lewinsky. On October 8, the House authorized a wide-ranging impeachment inquiry, and on December 11, the House Judiciary Committee approved three articles of impeachment. On December 19, after nearly 14 hours of debate, the House approved two articles of impeachment, charging President Clinton with lying under oath to a federal grand jury and obstructing justice. Clinton, the second president in American history to be impeached, vowed to finish his term. On January 7, 1999, in a congressional procedure not seen since the 1868 impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson, the trial of President Clinton got underway in the Senate. As instructed in Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution, the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court William Rehnquist was sworn in to preside and the senators were sworn in as jurors. Five weeks later, on February 12, the Senate voted on whether to remove Clinton from office. The president was acquitted on both articles of impeachment. The prosecution needed a two-thirds majority to convict but failed to achieve even a bare majority. Rejecting the first charge of perjury, 45 Democrats and 10 Republicans voted "not guilty" and on the charge of obstruction of justice the Senate was split 50-50. After the trial concluded, President Clinton said he was "profoundly sorry" for the burden his behavior imposed on Congress and the American people.
2004 - Some 90 gay and lesbian couples wed in San Francisco. Over the next few days some 2,000 took their vows.
2010 – The Giants signed Tim Lincecum, the NL Cy Young Award winner in both 2008 and 2009, to a two-year contract worth $23 million, thus avoiding a record-setting arbitration hearing.
2014 - A massive winter storm across the southern US caused widespread power outages, travel disruptions and dangerous road conditions.
2014 - All-time great New York Yankees SS Derek Jeter announced that he will retire after the 2014 season, his 20th. The team captain retired as the Yankees’ all-time leader in games played and hits, the only Yankee to surpass 3,000. His 3,465 hits are sixth all-time. He finished with a career batting average of .312, 5-time World Series champion, 5-time Silver Slugger, 5-time Gold Glove, 14-time All-Star…and a host of postseason records. Jeter was elected for induction to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2020, falling one vote short of unanimous but still the highest vote among all position players in the history of the game.
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SuDoku
The object is to insert the numbers in the boxes to satisfy only one condition: each row, column and 3x3 box must contain the digits 1 through 9 exactly once. What could be simpler?
http://leasingnews.org/Soduku/soduko-main.htm
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How to play:
http://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle_frame.htm
Refresh for current date:
http://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle_frame.htm
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http://www.gasbuddy.com/
http://www.gasbuddy.com/GB_Map_Gas_Prices.aspx
http://www.gasbuddy.com/GB_Mobile_Instructions.aspx
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http://www.weather.gov/
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