Friday, September 18, 2020
Today's Leasing News Headlines
Readers Guessed Right: Marlin Capital Solutions
Email from Former Employee Asking for Help
Each Time a Woman Stands Up for Herself
Placard
New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Leasing Industry Ads
---Help Wanted
How Much Should You Set Aside for Marketing Expenses?
FinTech #102 by Alex Vasilakos
Most Marketers Don't Believe In-Person Events
Will Happen This Year
What Does the World Make of America's
Covid-19 Response? - Chart
ELFF September Confidence Report 56.4% Confidence
An Increase from the August Index of 48.4.%
Auto defaults rise for second consecutive month
By SubPrime Auto Finance News Staff
Classics Chosen by Fernando Croce: The Lady Eve/
War of the Worlds/Bruce Lee--His Greatest Hits
The Lost Honor of Catharine Blum/Taste of Cherry
Mutt (mixed breed)
Blackwood, New Jersey Adopt-a-Dog
ELFA Announces Fall Webinars
for Equipment Finance Professionals
Free to Members and Non-Members
News Briefs---
Federal judge issues temporary injunction against USPS
operational changes amid concerns about mail slowdowns
Five maps that show just how much
the US is dealing with now
Riots following George Floyd’s death may cost
insurance companies up to $2 Billion
Wynn Resorts says nearly 550 employees have tested
positive for COVID/"well below US national average"
You May have Missed---
100,000 Restaurants Closed Six Months
into Pandemic
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
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.
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Readers Guessed Right: Marlin Capital Solutions
Email from Former Employee Asking for Help
Jeffrey A. Hilzinger, President and CEO, Marlin,
was sent email for a comment.
No response received at this time.
Michael Miles, Esq., Brown & Connery, attorney for
Marlin was sent email. No response. Here is his CV:
https://brownconnery.com/attorney/michael-miles/
(1) Email from Former Employee Asking for Help
Company Name Deleted by Leasing News
http://leasingnews.org/archives/Sep2020/09_16.htm#email
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New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Michael Coon, CLDP, was promoted to First Vice President, Portfolio Manager, Hanmi Bank, Rockford, Michigan. He joined the firm February, 2019, Senior Business Development and Capital Markets Officer. Previously, he was Chief Commercial Officer, North Star Leasing Company (September, 2018 - December, 2018); Vice President, Syndications Manager, Amur Equipment Finance
(September, 2015 - September, 2018); Vice President, Equipment Finance and Leasing Division, TAB Bank (October, 2011 - July, 2013); Vice President, Orion First Finance (February, 2011 - September, 2011); Managing Member, Aurora Management Group (January, 2010 - January, 2011); Executive Vice President. Enterprise Funding Group, LLC. (January, 2001 - December, 2009); Vice President, Business Development, Enterprise Capital Corp (February, 1996 - December, 2000); Retail Loan Business Development Officer (April, 1993 - February, 1996). Certification: Certified Lease and Finance Foundation. Volunteer. Board of Directors, President, National Equipment Finance Association. Member, Fraternal Order of the Police Lodge #97 (January, 2010 - Present). Education: Central Michigan University, BSBA, Finance and Marketing (1986 - 1988). https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-coon-7b638023/
Gary Crawford was hired as Sales Manager, NewLane Finance, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Previously, was at Marlin Capital Solutions, starting July, 2007, National Business Development Manager; promoted January,, 2015, National Sales Manager; promoted March, 2018, National Sales Director. Senior Loan Officer, Champion Mortgage (2002 - 2007); Executive Recruiter, Emerson Personnel Group (1999 - 2002). Education: Rowan University, Bachelor of Arts, Elementary Education and Psychology (1996 - 1998); Burlington County College. Associate in Arts, Psychology/General (1993 - 1996). Moorestown High School (1989 - 1993). https://www.linkedin.com/in/gcrawford75/
Al Harris was hired as Managing Director, Vantage Financial, Santa Barbara, California. “Harris spent over a decade playing basketball professionally overseas. Since his return, he has developed into a top sales producer in the software space.” Previously, he was at Procore Technologies, starting July, 2019 as Business Development Representative; promoted January, 2020, Enterprise Business
Development; promoted July, 2020, Senior Enterprise Business Development. Languages: English. German. Spanish. He holds 23 LinkedIn certificates and 4 Procore Technologies certificates. Education: UC Santa Barbara. Bachelor of Arts, BA. Activities and Societies: President of Student-Athlete Governance Board, Men's Basketball Team, where he earned All-American honors as four year member of the team. https://www.linkedin.com/in/al-harris-a894bb11b/
Jim Lindley was promoted to Executive Vice President, Director of Corporate and Enterprise Leasing Sales, Insight Financial Services, Costa Mesa, California. He joined the firm March, 2008, as Senior Vice President & Regional Director. Previously, he was Vice President, US Bancorp Oliver Allen Technology Leasing (August, 2001 - March, 2008); District Manager, Bankers Direct Leasing, a division of ABN AMRO Group (March, 1995 - August, 2001). Education: University of Southern California. Dual Bachelor of Science Degrees (1987 - 1991). https://www.linkedin.com/in/jim-lindley-06485435/
Cliff Livingston is now President, CJL Capital Leasing, Voorhees, New Jersey. Previously, he was Vice President, PNC (September, 2004 - October, 2016). Education: Eastern University, St. Davids, PA. Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA), Business/Commerce, General. Pierce College Philadelphia, PA. Associate of Science (A.S.), Accounting (1983 - 1985).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/cliff-livingston-18a279b8/
W. Keith Moore was hired by Wintrust Commercial Finance (WCF), a division of Wintrust Asset Finance, "...to lead WCF's Capital Markets Organization. Moore brings 33 years of experience to this role, most recently with BB&T (now Truist Financial) as Senior Vice President, Head of Structuring. During his tenure there, he also managed syndications efforts and the national sales organization. Additionally, his experience includes senior capital markets roles at Banc of America Leasing & Capital and LaSalle National Leasing Corporation, as well as sales and credit roles at MNC Financial Inc. (Maryland National Bank) and Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust Company. Moore holds a Bachelor of Science in finance from Pennsylvania State University and a Master of Science in finance from Johns Hopkins University." https://www.linkedin.com/in/keith-moore-49196530/
Todd Mounts was hired as Vice President, Senior Credit Underwriter, First Bank of the Lake, Orlando, Florida. Previously, he was Vice President, Credit Underwriter, Newtek Small Business Lending (August, 2010 - August, 2020); Vice President, Credit Underwriter, City National Bank (March, 2017 - July, 2019); Consultant, TM Investments, LLC (April, 2015 - March, 2017); Executive Vice President, business Development, Trax Capital (November, 2013 - March, 2015); Vice President Commercial Real Estate Relationship Manager/Asset Manager, PNC (May, 2004 - October, 2013); Credit Manager, Wells Fargo (September, 2003 - May, 2004). Volunteer: Annual Gala Participant Volunteer, Orlando Magic Youth Foundation (March, 1997 - March, 2002) Education: Keller Graduate School of Management of DeVry University. Master of Business Administration (MBA), Finance. University of Central Florida. Bachelor of Business Administration (B.B.A), Finance, General (2001 - 2003).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/todd-mounts-5b5b64b1/
Luke Spalding was hired as Credit Analyst, Upstart, San Francisco Bay Area. Previously, he was at the Lending Club, starting May, 2016 as Member Support Representative; Promoted August, 2017 as Credit Specialist; promoted August, 2018, Fraud Specialist; Customer Service Professional, Postdates (September, 2014 - November, 2015); Interview and Research Consultant, Ewald and Wasserman Research (May, 2014 - January, 2015); Market Research Recruiter, Fleischman Field Research (April, 2012 - April, 2014). Education: San Diego State University, California State University (2007- 2011). Bachelor degree in Psychology. Bachelors of Arts in Psychology, San Diego State University, 2012. https://www.linkedin.com/in/lukespalding/
Mike Wells was hired as Director, CapXPartners, Chicago, Illinois. “His responsibilities include Midwest business development and relationship management." He previously was Regional Vice President, First National Capital Corporation (July, 2018 - July, 2020). He joined MB Financial Bank March, 2008 as Commercial Banking Officer; promoted March, 2010, Assistant Vice President; promoted September, 2012, Vice President, Commercial Banking. He began his career as Credit Analyst, September, 2005, Bank of America Merrill Lynch (ABN AMRO/LaSalle Bank NA); promoted March, 2007, Relationship Manager. Education: Indiana University. Kelley School of Business. Bachelor of Science, Finance (2001 - 2005). Faculty Scholarship Recipient (4 years). https://www.linkedin.com/in/mike-wells-7660385/
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Leasing Industry Help Wanted
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How Much Should You Set Aside for Marketing Expenses?
FinTech #102 by Alex Vasilakos
The general rule of thumb is that businesses should set aside 10% of incoming revenue to invest in marketing. However, experts estimate that small businesses spend about 1% of gross revenue on marketing. One Entrepreneur.com article puts the estimate closer to 4% of gross revenue for 62% of small businesses.
Statista prefers to analyze it the way most business owners do: specifically by dollars and cents. It estimates that up to 47% of business owners spent less than $10,000 on budgeting in 2017. The companies that spent between $10,000 and $100,000 made up 25%. Entrepreneur.com also offers a dollar-value estimate that works out to roughly $400 per month.
What Is the Recommended Amount?
How much small business owners spend and how much they should spend aren’t quite the same thing. So, as you put pen to paper to refine your marketing budget for 2020 and the years beyond, note that the Small Business Administration recommends spending anywhere from 7% to 8% of gross revenue on advertising and marketing.
If you own a small startup or you’re just getting established in the market, 2% or 3% suffices. Businesses that operate in extremely competitive industries should consider spending up to 20% of their revenue on marketing.
What Individual Characteristics Should You Consider?
Every business is different, so there are some additional factors to consider on an individual basis. These help you to better fine-tune your marketing budget to suit your specific needs:
- Business Goals: How much money you need for marketing depends on what your goals are for the business. This determines the type of marketing strategies you need, which then inform the price.
- Marketing Strategies: Sometimes marketing strategies are a matter of preference. Some companies find many free, unique and effective options to cut marketing costs.
- Business Size: As alluded to above, if your business is new, you may need revenue to pay for more pressing expenses, so aiming lower on a marketing budget is understandable.
- Business Stage: For the first six months of business or when you need to jumpstart sales, consider investing up to 20% in marketing and advertising to reach your audience.
- Past Experience: If your business has been open for at least six months, you likely have some marketing data to work with to better decide how much money correlates to the results you need.
Alex Vasilakos
Director of Marketing
The Finance Marketing Group
Alex@financemarketing.com
Office: 518-591-4645x102 / Fax: 518-677-1071
90 State Street, Suite 1500, Albany, NY 12207
Previous Financial Technology Articles
http://www.leasingnews.org/Conscious-Top%20Stories
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Most Marketers Don't Believe In-Person Events
Will Happen This Year
Roughly seven in 10 (71.2%) US ad and marketing executives think it’s at least somewhat unlikely that in-person business events, including conferences and large industry shows, will take place by the end of 2020.
In fact, just 8.8% of respondents said it’s at least somewhat likely that live events will place this year, indicating that virtual events—which have increased amid the pandemic—will likely be a regular occurrence in the meantime.
eMarketer.com
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A new Pew Research Center survey has found that international views of the United States have deteriorated sharply in recent years, particularly since Donald Trump was elected president. The downward trend in favorability accelerated over the past year amid the botched U.S. response to the Covid-19 outbreak. In some countries, the share of the public with a favorable view of the U.S. has fallen to its lowest level since Pew first conducted the survey nearly 20 years ago. In France and Germany, favorability has declined to levels not seen since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. One of the most telling aspects of the research was the view of the U.S. coronavirus response in other countries, with the overwhelming majority of people saying Washington handled the situation badly.
The latest data from the Johns Hopkins University shows that the U.S. now has 6.6 million infections with the death toll swiftly approaching 200,000. The Trump administration was criticized for taking emergency measures including lockdowns far too late while hospitals struggled amid chronic shortages of PPE equipment. Flaws in CDC testing kits added to the chaos and the U.S. took weeks to get up to speed in mass testing. Elsewhere, countries such as South Korea and Germany got their outbreaks under control swiftly through a variety of measures such as early lockdowns along with efficient testing, isolation and tracing strategies. Their infection rates and subsequent death tolls remained relatively low compared to other countries as a result.
The survey's findings regarding international attitudes towards America's coronavirus response are damning with half or more of respondents in 11 countries stating that the U.S. handled the situation very badly. The highest share of people saying the U.S. did a good job was in Spain at 20 percent while the lowest value was recorded in South Korea at six percent. This infographic shows the situation in eight U.S. ally/partner countries with the share of the public considering America's response bad at 85 percent or higher in South Korea, Australia and Germany.
By Niall McCarthy, Statista
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ELFF September Confidence Report 56.4% Confidence
An Increase from the August Index of 48.4.%
Survey Comments from Industry Executive Leadership on September Equipment Leasing and Finance Foundation report.
David Normandin, CLFP,
President and CEO, Wintrust Specialty Finance
“Steady application counts and approval ratios continue to tell the story of opportunity in our space. I expect the election cycle will be turbulent and affect business.”
Daniel Krajewski,
President and CEO, Sertant Capital, LLC
“We are seeing pipeline opportunity remaining steady across a broad spectrum of industries.”
Dave Fate,
President and CEO, Stonebriar Commercial Finance,
“The equipment finance industry has always been resilient. The debt and equity markets are strong with lots of liquidity, and election noise will be over soon.”
Christopher Enbom, CLFP,
CEO and Chairman, AP Equipment Financing
“I am more positive than I was three months ago regarding the duration of the recession and the future in general. The economic stimulus was very well timed and now people are quickly adjusting to living with COVID. In certain industries spending has increased dramatically.”
Valerie Hayes Jester,
President, Brandywine Capital Associates, Inc.
“I have confidence that the equipment finance industry will always be a key element in providing capital to continue to support the supply chain. In an election year, with a pandemic and extensive social unrest, the immediate and medium-term future is not clear. The industry is durable and creative and will always be on the front lines of equipment acquisition and asset management.”
J.D. Jenks,
CEO, Global Financial & Leasing Services, LLC
“While a few industries (e.g., restaurant, airlines, hospitality, elective health care, etc.) will be adversely impacted until COVID restrictions are lifted, most other industries are experiencing revenue improvement. Thus, short term will experience limited recovery, and medium and long term should be returning stronger than before the COVID shutdown of the economy.”
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##### Press Release ############################
Auto defaults rise for second consecutive month
By SubPrime Auto Finance News Staff
NEW YORK - While Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA) described credit performance during the July collection period as “solid,” the data through August released by S&P Dow Jones Indices and Experian earlier this week showed that auto defaults remain on the rise.
The auto portion of the S&P/Experian Consumer Credit Default Indices climbed for the second month in a row, ticking up by 6 basis points on a sequential basis to land at 0.53%. The latest reading is 13 basis points higher than the June figure that set an all-time low at 0.40%.
A year ago, auto defaults sat at 0.98% and have been below 1% each month so far in 2020, according to data compiled by S&P Dow Jones Indices and Experian.
Meanwhile, the newest composite rate, which represents a comprehensive measure of changes in consumer credit defaults, edged up 1 basis point in August to come in at 0.67%.
As the bank card default rate fell 41 basis points to 3.45%, analysts noted that the first mortgage default rate ticked 4 basis points higher to 0.48%.
As they do on a monthly basis, S&P Dow Jones Indices and Experian also examined data from the five largest metropolitan areas, finding that four of them posted higher default rates in August compared to the previous month.
Miami recorded the largest increase, rising 16 basis points to 1.99%. New York moved 10 basis points higher to 0.96%, while Dallas increased 4 basis points to 0.65%.
The rate for Los Angeles inched up 1 basis point to 0.76%.
Chicago was the only one of these large metro areas to record a decrease in August, dipping 1 basis point to 0.65%.
Jointly developed by S&P Indices and Experian, analysts noted the S&P/Experian Consumer Credit Default Indices are published monthly with the intent to accurately track the default experience of consumer balances in four key loan categories: auto, bankcard, first mortgage lien and second mortgage lien.
The indices are calculated based on data extracted from Experian’s consumer credit database. This database is populated with individual consumer loan and payment data submitted by lenders to Experian every month.
Experian’s base of data contributors includes leading banks and mortgage companies and covers approximately $11 trillion in outstanding loans sourced from 11,500 lenders.
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Watch at Home
By Fernando Croce
From romantic comedies to rampaging aliens to existential wanderers, Criterion continues to uphold the restoration of a wide variety of classics both old and new. So check out Netflix for these exceptional DVD and Blu-Ray releases.
The Lady Eve (Preston Sturges, 1941): A comedic force of nature in the early 1940s, writer-director Preston Sturges had his most beloved hit with this marvelous classic, which amply showcases his legendary facility with eccentric characters and cyclonic dialogue. Jean (Barbara Stanwyck) is a savvy con artist who scans the decks of a luxury liner for her latest victim, and stumbles upon naive, wealthy explorer Charles (Henry Fonda). Dumped by the millionaire just as she starts to develop feelings for him, she comes up with an elaborate revenge—re-introducing herself as a whole new character, a mysterious society lady named Eve. The heavenly pairing of Stanwyck and Fonda is enhanced by a delightful supporting cast that includes William Demarest, Charles Coburn and Eugene Pallette. An absolute must for movie buffs and comedy lovers.
War of the Worlds (Byron Haskin, 1953): Armageddon rarely looked more vivid than in this memorable screen version of H.G. Wells’ story about an alien invasion. It begins locally, in a small California town after a meteorite crash lands and attracts visitors, including scientist Clayton Forrester (Gene Barry) and instructor Sylvia Van Buren (Ann Robinson). It’s not long, however, that the visitors from outer space reveal themselves as invaders bent on taking over the world. Vaporizing military forces, the aliens seem to be an unstoppable menace. Can humankind discover their weak spot, or is it doomed to complete destruction? Shot by Byron Haskin with bold colors and striking images, the film remains a tremendous spectacle of excitement and paranoia. Though Steven Spielberg’s remake has its own nightmarish power, there’s no beating the original.
Bruce Lee—His Greatest Hits: An action icon for his prowess, grace and sheer cool, Bruce Lee slashed across screens in a string of 1970s hits before his untimely death. Criterion’s five-disc set goes a long way in illustrating Lee’s legendary status, showcasing his intensity as well as his humor. His breakthrough, “The Big Boss” (1971), has him as an immigrant factory worker fighting against corrupt owners. In “Fist of Fury” (1972), Lee at his most ferocious finds himself protecting his martial-arts school in Japanese-occupied China, while his most famous film, “Enter the Dragon” (1973), casts him as a fighter infiltrating a criminal mastermind’s island. Including Lee’s directorial debut, “The Way of the Dragon” (1972), as well as his swansong “Game of Death” (1978), the set is a treat for kung-fu aficionados.
The Lost Honor of Katharine Blum (Volker Schlondorff & Margarethe von Trotta, 1975): A powerful, intelligent account of lives caught in the midst of media manipulation, this classic of New German Cinema continues to resonate to this day. Katharine Blum (Angela Wrinkler) is a regular woman who finds herself exposed in a scandal when the man she spent the night with turns out to be an activist wanted by the police. Interrogated by the authorities, she loses her job and standing in her community, with suffering doled out upon her family by tabloid newspapers more interested in giving readers sensationalism than the truth. Directed by Volker Schlondorff and Margarethe von Trotta, the film is a hard-hitting snapshot of freedom and control that’s lost little of its stinging power. With subtitles
Taste of Cherry (Abbas Kiarostami): The great Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami won a richly deserved Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival for this beautifully humanistic meditation. The story follows Mr. Badii (Homayoun Ershadi), a mysterious middle-aged man who is determined to take his own life and is looking for somebody to help him carry his plan out. Driving around the outskirts of Tehran, he comes across three different men—a bashful Kurdish soldier, an Afghan cleric, and an Azeri taxidermist with money troubles and an ailing child. Over the course of the day, Mr. Badii goes through a spiritual journey, with a glimmer of possible hope materializing as he comes face to face with an open grave. Brimming with Kiarostami’s visual expressiveness, subtle humor and multi-layered use of cinema, this is a masterpiece. With subtitles.
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Mutt (mixed breed)
Blackwood, New Jersey Adopt-a-Dog
Kent
Male
6 years, 5 months
44 lbs.
Black
Neutered
Declawed: no
Housetrained: Unknown
Site: Homeward Bound Pet Adoption
Location: Foster Care
Intake Date: 4/8/2019
Much like Clark Kent, this guy has a very ordinary outward appearance. Meet Kent, he is super in his own way. Yes, he has that dark brooding gaze, the brindle highlights in his hair, but there is more. He is super fun and super excited to meet you. Kent is your very own protector and sidekick. He is easy-going, and easy to love.
Homeward Bound
125 County House Road
Blackwood, NJ 08012
856-401-1309
info@homewardboundnj.org
Adoption Center – By Appointment Only
Sunday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
Wednesday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
Thursday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
Friday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
Saturday: 11:00 am – 4:00 pm
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ELFA Announces Fall Webinars
for Equipment Finance Professionals
Free to Members and Non-Members
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Equipment Leasing and Finance Association today announced three new webinars scheduled for Fall 2020. The webinars are designed to provide critical information to equipment finance professionals on essential hot topics. Each event will engage experts on important issues and allow attendees to ask questions during interactive Q&A sessions. The following webinars are scheduled for September and October; additional webinars will be scheduled for later this fall.
Igniting Relationships, Virtually Speaking
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1-2pm ET
As we interact more through technology and less in person, we must adapt to new ways of building and maintaining relationships. How do you create a connection through a camera lens? How do you build trust, confidence and credibility over the internet, instead of over a cup of coffee? Join us to discuss the science of relationships in the equipment finance sector.
Featuring: Moderator Jennifer Fanz, Women’s Council Chair-Elect and Director of Sales, DLL and presenter Rhonda Miele, Global Program Manager, Commercial Academy, DLL.
Register: www.elfaonline.org/events/2020/ww092320
Ask a Leader Panel: Managing Remote Teams and the Post-COVID Norm
Thursday, Oct. 1, 2020 4-5:30pm ET
The sudden shift to a remote working environment has organizations rethinking management and operational strategies. Panelists will discuss changing expectations for managing remotely, how to effectively grow and nurture teams from a distance and whether the remote working environment is here to stay.
Featuring: Moderator Victoria Widmann, Emerging Talent Advisory Council Member and AVP, Credit and Syndication, OnPoint Capital, LLC; Jim DeFrank, Executive Vice President & COO, Isuzu Finance of America; Cindy Fleck, CLFP, Sr. Vice President, CPC Equipment Finance Group, Channel Partners Capital; and Scott Thacker, CPA, CLFP, CEO, Ivory Consulting Corporation.
Register: www.elfaonline.org/events/2020/ALP100120
Pandemic Politics: Update on the 2020 General Election
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2-3 ET
This special-edition webinar will dive into the general election campaigns to provide insight into which Senate races to watch and the state of the presidential race. Join Chelsea Neil, ELFA’s Director of Federal Government Relations, as she speaks with Jim Ellis, Senior Political Analyst at the Business-Industry Political Action Committee. Includes dedicated time for Q&A.
Register: www.elfaonline.org/events/2020/PP100620
More Information
For questions regarding any of these events, please email meetings@elfaonline.org. To view upcoming webinars and recordings of past webinars, visit www.elfaonline.org/events/elearning/web-seminars.
About ELFA
The Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) is the trade association that represents companies in the nearly $1 trillion equipment finance sector, which includes financial services companies and manufacturers engaged in financing capital goods. ELFA members are the driving force behind the growth in the commercial equipment finance market and contribute to capital formation in the U.S. and abroad. Its 575 members include independent and captive leasing and finance companies, banks, financial services corporations, broker/packagers and investment banks, as well as manufacturers and service providers. For more information, please visit www.elfaonline.org.
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This Day in History
1502 - Christopher Columbus landed at Honduras on his 4th and last voyage. He would retire a very wealthy man, primarily from the slave trading.
1634 - The first female religious leader in the American colonies was Anne Hutchinson, born Anne Marbury (1591-1643) in England, arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony with her family. She organized groups of women who met at her house and led them in the discussion of secular and theological questions. She taught that each person could attain understanding in matters of faith and therefore owed no obedience to church law. Her influence became so great that in November, 1687, she was brought to trial in Cambridge for undermining the authority of the colony's Puritan ministers. Banished from the colony, she was given a safe haven in Roger William's settlement (the future Providence, RI) along with 70 followers. In 1642, she moved to the wilderness near what is now Pelham Bay, NY, where she and her family were killed by Native Americans.
1679 – New Hampshire became a county in Massachusetts Bay Colony.
1769 - The first harpsichord piano was made by John Harris. It was called a spinet and was described in the Boston Gazette, “It hath only three or four octaves. Each jack was provided with a little spur of goose-quill that plucked the thin wire to cause vibration”. It became very popular in many
New England homes and churches.
1789 - The first loan taken out by the US was negotiated and secured by Alexander Hamilton. After beginning negotiations with the Bank of New York and the Bank of North America, Hamilton obtained the sum of $191,608.81 from the two banks in what became known as the Temporary Loan of 1789. The loan was obtained without authority of law and was used to pay the salaries of the president, senators, representatives and officers of the first Congress. Repayment was completed on June 8, 1790.
1793 - President George Washington laid the Capitol cornerstone at Washington, DC, in a Masonic ceremony. That event was the first and last recorded occasion at which the stone with its engraved silver plate was seen. In 1958, during the extension of the east front of the Capitol, an unsuccessful effort was made to find it.
1830 - In a widely celebrated race, the first locomotive build in America, the Tom Thumb, lost to a horse. Mechanical difficulties plagued the steam engine over the nine-mile course between Riley's Tavern and Baltimore, Maryland, and a boiler leak prevented the locomotive from finishing the race. In the early days of trains, engines were nicknamed "Iron Horse." People in the 19th century were opposed to change, and inventions took thirty to forty years before they were put in place, Industries were also intertwined with company owned stores, houses, other retail businesses. The attitude at the time of this race
was steam locomotive would never replace the horse, which was faster, more mobile, and "user friendly.” Why do we need a “rail road?”
1837 - Tiffany & Company is founded by Charles Lewis Tiffany and Teddy Young in New York City. The store is called a "stationery and fancy goods emporium."
1850 - After long debates and failure to pass the omnibus bill, Congress passed Fugitive Slave Law as part of the compromise of 1850 in separate bills. It was supposed to cool down the growing differences between those opposing slavery and those that owned slaves, but according to historians, the bill was instrumental in dividing the sides. Northerners did not enforce their part of the Fugitive Slave Law; they did not catch or return any run-away slaves, angering the South. The reason the North turned against Slavery: they saw slaves captured - (men, women, and children); they were chained and marched through the streets. People in the north did not like immigrants because they thought that they lost jobs to these foreigners. They even started political parties against immigrants. http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0813116.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2951.html
1851 - "The New York Times" began publishing “All the News That's Fit to Print.” The "Times" now owns other media, such radio, TV, cable and the Internet. Their edition on September 11, 2002, was one of the best ever, perhaps the most well-written newspaper in the United States.
1863 - Battle of Chickamauga, Tenn. (near Chattanooga) begins; Union retreat
http://www2.cr.nps.gov/abpp/battles/ga004.htm
http://ngeorgia.com/history/chickam.html
http://www.dean.usma.edu/history/dhistorymaps/
AcivilwarPages/acwL42.htm
1870 – Old Faithful was observed and named by Henry D. Washburn during an expedition to Yellowstone.
1873 – The Panic of 1873 began when the U.S. bank Jay Cooke & Company declared bankruptcy, triggering a series of bank failures.
1889 - Hull House Opens. This settlement house was founded in Chicago by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr. It soon became the heart of one of the country's most influential social reform movements, offering a mix of cultural and education programs to new immigrants.
1891 - “White Woman” Harriet Maxwell Converse (1836-1903) was made a chief of the Six Nations Tribe at the Tonawanda Reservation, NY. She was given the name Ga-is-wa-noh, which means “The Watcher.” She had been adopted as a member of the Seneca tribe in 1884 in appreciation of her efforts on behalf of the tribe.
1895 - Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) delivered his famous "Atlanta Compromise" speech at the opening of the Cotton States and International Exhibition in Atlanta, Georgia. Washington, the founder and president of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute, was the first African-American man ever to address a racially-mixed Southern audience. He used the occasion to advocate a moderate approach to race relations in the New South.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/sep18.html
1903 – In what became the first World Series, the presidents of the pennant-winning clubs in the National and American Leagues signed an agreement to meet in a best-of-nine series for the championship. The Boston Americans of the AL defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates of the NL, 5 games to 3.
1905 - Birthday of Agnes DeMille (1905-93) at New York, NY. Dancer, choreographer for ballet and Broadway shows such as “Oklahoma.” http://kennedy-center.org/programs/specialevents/honors/history
/honoree/demille.html
1905 - Greta Garbo’s birthday (1905-90), born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson in Stockholm, Sweden. Actor of the almost perfect face and one of the great stars of cinema. She made 24 films in Hollywood and was nominated for Academy Awards four times. She was finally awarded a special Academy Award in 1954 "for her unforgettable screen performances." Although she retired in 1941 to live in seclusion in New York, the paparazzi continued to chase her and the gossip newspapers printed photos of her when she was in her 70s and 80s - even while swimming. She hated making movies and condemned their superficialities as well as the burden of being portrayed a beautiful thing rather than a human being. She left school at 14 to work after her father died. A film director saw her, admired her beauty and gave her a small part in a movie. She then studied at the Royal Dramatic Theater School in Stockholm for two years where she met Mauritz Stiller, the foremost Swedish film director of his time who renamed her Garbo. When he went to the United States to work for MGM, he took her along. Garbo's fame soon eclipsed his. One of the few stars who were able to move from silent films to talkies, she made “The Torrent” (1926), “Flesh and the Devil” (1927), “Love” (1927), “A Woman of Affairs” (1929), and “Wild Orchids” (1929). Garbo starred in "talkies" for the next 14 years before walking away from movies, some say because her box office draw was dwindling, others because she was aging and didn't want the world to watch the process. Others noted her hatred of the Hollywood superficiality. The Hollywood publicists blared "Garbo Talks!" as she starred in her first talkie, “Anna Christie” (1930), followed by “Mata Hari” (1932), “Grand Hotel” (1932), “Queen Christina” (1933), “Anna Karenina” (1935), “Camille” (1936), and “Ninotchka” (1939). She was a lesbian rather than a bi-sexual. Ironically, Marlene Dietrich who was brought to the U.S. as a rival to Garbo was a bi-sexual who, in private life, also played the rival to several of Garbo's women lovers. "I said I wanted to be left alone, not I want to be alone. There is a great difference," Garbo explained about the misquote that is universally attributed to her.
http://www.bombshells.com/gallery/garbo/
http://www.lynnpdesign.com/classicmovies/garbo/
1905 – Eddie “Rochester” Anderson (1905-77) was born Edmund Lincoln Anderson in Oakland, CA. Anderson got his start in show business as a teenager in Vaudeville. In the early 1930s, he transitioned into films and radio. In 1937, he began his most famous role of Rochester van Jones, usually known simply as "Rochester", the valet of Jack Benny, on his radio show. Anderson became the first African American to have a regular role on a nationwide radio program. When the series moved to television, Anderson continued in the role until the series' end in 1965.
1910 - Birthday of Samuel “Sam” Bankhead (1910-76), baseball player and manager, at Empire, AL. Bankhead starred for several teams in the Negro Leagues from 1930 to 1950. In 1951, he became organized baseball's first black manager, handling the Farnham team in the Provincial League.
1919 – Fritz Pollard became the first African-American to play professional football for a major team, the Akron Pros, a charter member of the American Professional Football Association.
1924 – Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit (d. 1963) was born in Annona, TX. On November 22, 1963, Tippit was fatally shot on a Dallas street approximately 45 minutes after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. According to five federal government investigations, Tippit was shot by former United States Marine Lee Harvey Oswald, but Oswald denied shooting Tippit.
1925 – Harvey Haddix (1925-94) was born in Medway, OH. His somewhat average Major League career is best remembered for the night of May 26, 1959. Pitching for the Pittsburgh Pirates, he threw a perfect game for 12 innings before losing it the 13th against the Milwaukee Braves. A fielding error by Pirates 3B Don Hoak ended the perfect game with the leadoff batter for Milwaukee, Felix Mantilla, reaching first base. Mantilla later advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Eddie Mathews, which was followed by an intentional walk to Henry Aaron. Joe Adcock then hit an apparent home run, ending the no-hitter and the game. However, in the confusion, Aaron left the base paths and was passed by Adcock for the second out and the Braves won 2-0. Haddix's 12 2/3-inning, one-hit complete game, against the team that had just represented the NL in the previous two World Series, is considered by many to be the best single pitching performance in Major League history. In 1991, Major League Baseball changed the definition of a no-hitter to "a game in which a pitcher or pitchers complete a game of nine innings or more without allowing a hit;" the rule's formalization had the effect of proclaiming Adcock's drive singularly fatal to Haddix's no-hit bid, irrespective of the score or the game's ultimate outcome. Despite having thrown more perfect innings than anyone in a single game, Haddix's game was taken off the list of perfect games. Haddix's response was "It's O.K. I know what I did.”
1927 - The Columbia Broadcasting System was launched in the United States. Many of the radio network's programs originated at station WOR in New York. My late father, Lawrence Menkin, in the late 1940's, was station manager of WOR radio, and then worked for WOR-TV in 1949 and early 1950's, introducing “Harlem Detective,” “Hands of Murder,” and “One Man Theater.” He then went to work for DuMont TV, introducing these shows there, plus a new one for which is best known, “Captain Video and the Space Rangers.” By the way, NBC was the first network. “The Tiffany Network,” as CBS was called, broadcast an opera, "The King's Henchman," as its first program. William S. Paley put the network together, purchasing a chain of 16 failing radio stations. The controlling interest cost between $250,000 and $450,000. The following year, the 27-year-old Paley became President of CBS. It only took one more year for him to profit 2.35 million dollars as the network grew to over 70 stations.
1933 – Robert Blake, “Baretta,” was born Michael James Gubitosi in Nutley, NJ. Blake began performing as a child, with a lead role in the final years of MGM's “Our Gang” (Little Rascals) short film series from 1939 to 1944. He also appeared as a child actor in 22 entries of the “Red Ryder” film franchise. After a stint in the Army, Blake returned to acting in both television and movie roles. Blake may be best known for his Emmy Award-winning role of Tony Baretta in the popular television series “Baretta” (1975 to 1978), playing an undercover police detective who specialized in disguises. He continued acting through 1997's “Lost Highway” for a career that author Michael Newton called "one of the longest in Hollywood history." In 2005, Blake was tried and acquitted of the 2001 murder of his second wife, Bonnie Lee Bakley. On November 18, 2005, he was found liable in a California civil court for her wrongful death.
1933 – Jimmie Rodgers was born in Camas, WA. Rodgers had a brief run of mainstream popularity in the late 1950s with a string of crossover singles that ranked highly on the charts: “Honeycomb” (1957), “Kisses Sweeter than Wine” (1957), “Oh, Oh, I’m Falling I Love Again” (1958), “Secretly” (1958).
1938 - Birthday of drummer Walter “Popee” Lastie (1938-80), New Orleans, LA. Best known for playing drums with Fats Domino, but his family was well-known in musical circles in New Orleans. http://publications.neworleans.com/no_magazine/34.1
2.34-MusicRhthym.html
http://www.wandarouzan.com/html/the_band.html
1939 - Saxophonist Steve Marcus (1939-2005) Birthday in The Bronx.
http://shopping.yahoo.com/shop?d=product&id=1927
006985&clink=dmmu.artist&a=b
1940 - Birthday of former teen idol-singer-actor Frankie Avalon, born Francis Thomas Avallone, Philadelphia, PA. He was among the late 50s rock ‘n’ roll teen idols that included fellow Philadelphians, Bobby Rydell and Fabian, Ricky Nelson, Bobby Darin and others whose popularity took off when Elvis went into the Army. His first hit was “DeDe Dinah” that reached #7 in 1958. In 1959, "Venus" (5 weeks #1) and "Why" went to number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Why" was the last #1 of the 1950s. Avalon had 31 charted U.S. Billboard singles from 1958 to late 1962, including "Just Ask Your Heart" (U.S. #7), "I’ll Wait for You" (U.S. #15), "Bobby Sox to Stockings" (U.S. #8), and "A Boy Without a Girl" (U.S. #10). Most of his hits were written and/or produced by Bob Marcucci, head of Chancellor Records. Teamed frequently with Annette, Avalon starred in a number of popular "beach party" comedy films during the mid-1960s and made a comeback in the 1978 hit “Grease.”
1940 - Will Bradley records “Scrub Me, Mama, with a Boogie Beat,” sequel to “Beat Me, Daddy”, recorded four months earlier.
1944 - Birthday of singer and songwriter Michael Franks, La Jolla, California. His pop-jazz tunes have been recorded by such artists as the Carpenters, Melissa Manchester and Manhattan Transfer. Franks' own albums have been moderately popular, and usually feature well-known backing musicians. For instance, he was aided on his 1976 LP "The Art of Tea" by the Crusaders. In the late 1960's, Franks spent some time at the University of Montreal, where he obtained a master's degree in contemporary culture. While in Canada, he opened shows for Gordon Lightfoot and played with the groups Carnival and Lighthouse.
1944 - JACKSON, ARTHUR J., Medal of Honor.
Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Marine Corps, 3d Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division. Place and date: Island of Peleliu in the Palau group, 18 September 1944. Entered service at: Oregon. Born: 18 October 1924, Cleveland Ohio. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving with the 3d Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, in action against enemy Japanese forces on the Island of Peleliu in the Palau group, 18 September 1944. Boldly taking the initiative when his platoon's left flank advance was held up by the fire of Japanese troops concealed in strongly fortified positions, Pfc. Jackson unhesitatingly proceeded forward of our lines and, courageously defying the heavy barrages, charged a large pillbox housing approximately 35 enemy soldiers. Pouring his automatic fire into the opening of the fixed installation to trap the occupying troops, he hurled white phosphorus grenades and explosive charges brought up by a fellow marine, demolishing the pillbox and killing all of the enemy. Advancing alone under the continuous fire from other hostile emplacements, he employed similar means to smash 2 smaller positions in the immediate vicinity. Determined to crush the entire pocket of resistance although harassed on all sides by the shattering blasts of Japanese weapons and covered only by small rifle parties, he stormed 1 gun position after another, dealing death and destruction to the savagely fighting enemy in his inexorable drive against the remaining defenses, and succeeded in wiping out a total of 12 pillboxes and 50 Japanese soldiers. Stouthearted and indomitable despite the terrific odds, Pfc. Jackson resolutely maintained control of the platoon's left flank movement throughout his valiant 1-man assault and, by his cool decision and relentless fighting spirit during a critical situation, contributed essentially to the complete annihilation of the enemy in the southern sector of the island. His gallant initiative and heroic conduct in the face of extreme peril reflect the highest credit upon Pfc. Jackson and the U.S. Naval Service.
1944 - JOHNSON, OSCAR G., Medal of Honor
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company B, 363d Infantry, 91st Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Scarpered, Italy, 16-18 September 1944. Entered service at: Foster City, Mich. Birth: Foster City, Mich. G.O. No.: 58, 19 July 1945. Citation: (then Pfc.) He practically single-handed protected the left flank of his company's position in the offensive to break the German's gothic line. Company B was the extreme left assault unit of the corps. The advance was stopped by heavy fire from Monticelli Ridge, and the company took cover behind an embankment. Sgt. Johnson, a mortar gunner, having expended his ammunition, assumed the duties of a rifleman. As leader of a squad of 7 men he was ordered to establish a combat post 50 yards to the left of the company to cover its exposed flank. Repeated enemy counterattacks, supported by artillery, mortar, and machinegun fire from the high ground to his front, had by the afternoon of 16 September killed or wounded all his men. Collecting weapons and ammunition from his fallen comrades, in the face of hostile fire, he held his exposed position and inflicted heavy casualties upon the enemy, who several times came close enough to throw hand grenades. On the night of 1617 September, the enemy launched his heaviest attack on Company B, putting his greatest pressure against the lone defender of the left flank. In spite of mortar fire which crashed about him and machinegun bullets which whipped the crest of his shallow trench, Sgt. Johnson stood erect and repulsed the attack with grenades and small arms fire. He remained awake and on the alert throughout the night, frustrating all attempts at infiltration. On 17 September, 25 German soldiers surrendered to him. Two men, sent to reinforce him that afternoon, were caught in a devastating mortar and artillery barrage. With no thought of his own safety, Sgt. Johnson rushed to the shell hole where they lay half buried and seriously wounded, covered their position by his fire, and assisted a Medical Corpsman in rendering aid. That night he secured their removal to the rear and remained on watch until his company was relieved. Five companies of a German paratroop regiment had been repeatedly committed to the attack on Company B without success. Twenty dead Germans were found in front of his position. By his heroic stand and utter disregard for personal safety, Sgt. Johnson was in a large measure responsible for defeating the enemy's attempts to turn the exposed left flank.
1947 - The US Air Force was officially established. Although its heritage dates back to 1907 when the Army first established military aviation, the US Air Force became a separate military service on this date. Responsible for providing an Air Force that is capable, in conjunction with the other armed forces, of preserving the peace and security of the US, the department is separately organized under the Secretary of the Air Force and operates under the authority, direction and control of the Secretary of Defense.
1948 - "The Original Amateur Hour" returned to radio on ABC, two years after the passing of the program's originator and host, Major Bowes. Bowes brought new star talent into living rooms for 13 years. Ted Mack, the new host, had also started a TV run with "The Original Amateur Hour" on the DuMont network in January of 1948.
1948 – Margaret Chase Smith of Maine became the first woman elected to the Senate without completing another senator’s term when she defeated Democratic opponent Adrian Scolten.
1949 - Montreal-born jazz pianist Oscar Peterson made a sensational debut at Carnegie Hall as a surprise guest at a Jazz at the Philharmonic concert. The producer of Jazz at the Philharmonic, Norman Granz, had planted Peterson in the audience and had him come on stage midway through the event. Granz became Peterson's manager, an association that was to last 30 years.
1950 - “The Speidel Show” premiered and became one of my favorite television shows. Ventriloquist Paul Winchell was featured with his dummies, Jerry Mahoney and Knucklehead Smiff, on this NBC comedy-variety series which ran for four years. Dorothy Claire, Hilda Vaughn and Jimmy Blame also made appearances on the show, which included the quiz segment “What's My Name?” Winchell later hosted a variety of programs such as “Circus Time,” “The Paul Winchell Show,” “CartoOnieS,” “Winchell and Mahoney Time” and “Runaround.” The Jerry Mahoney puppet was very popular and I had one, actually appearing in school shows with a comedy routine when I was eight and nine years old.
1952 - Top Hits
“Wish You Were Here” - Eddie Fisher
“Auf Wiedersehn, Sweetheart” - Vera Lynn
“Half as Much” - Rosemary Clooney
“Jambalaya (On the Bayou)” - Hank Williams
1955 - What had been "The Toast of the Town" on CBS Television (since 1948) became "The Ed Sullivan Show." This “rilly big shew” remained a mainstay of Sunday night television until June 6, 1971. Sullivan was a newspaper columnist/critic before and during the early years of this pioneering TV show. It was one of the most popular, introducing many stars including Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and the home town boy of Port Chester, New York was not only famous, but powerful, as if you appeared on his show, your career was sure to take off.
1956 – 24-year-old Mickey Mantle became only the 8th Major Leaguer to hit as many as 50 homers in a season when he connected off Billy Pierce of the White Sox. This was Mantle’s Triple Crown season and he would wind up with 52 while winning the AL MVP Award.
1957 - "The Big Record," hosted by ‘the singing rage,' Miss Patti Page, debuted on CBS-TV. "The Big Record" was a live musical showcase featuring established artists singing their big songs. "The Big Record" lasted one big season.
1957 - “Wagon Train,” premiered on television. My father Lawrence Menkin wrote many of the episodes and contributed stories and “treatments” on the growth of the characters. This was a popular Western on both NBC and ABC, airing for eight years with its last telecast September 5, 1965. The series was about a journey along the wagon trial from Missouri to California. Each Week the travelers encountered new surroundings and interacted with different guest stars. Ward Bond played wagon master Major Seth Adams until his death in 1960. He was replaced by John McIntire as Chris Hale. Other regulars were Robert Horton as scout Flint McCullough; Frank McGrath as cook, Charlie Wooster; Terry Will as Bill Hawks; Danny(Scott) Miller as scout Luke Shannon; Michael Burns as Barnaby West, a teen passenger and Robert Fuller as scout Cooper.
1960 - Top Hits
“It's Now or Never” - Elvis Presley
“The Twist” - Chubby Checker
“My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own” - Connie Francis
“Alabam” - Cowboy Copas
1961 - On his twenty-first birthday, Frankie Avalon is given $600,000 that he earned as a minor.
1961 – UN Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold died in a plane crash while attempting to negotiate peace in the war-torn Katanga region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
1961 – 15 year old English actress Hayley Mills sees her US debut recording “Let’s Get Together” enter the Billboard charts, where it will reach #8.
1961 – Bobby Vee scores his third US top ten hit and his only number one with “Take Good Care Of My Baby.”
1961 – Actor James Gandolfini (d. 2013) was born in Westwood, NJ. He will be forever known for his role as mob boss Tony Soprano in the HBO crime drama, “The Sopranos.” He garnered enormous praise for his performance, winning three Emmy Awards, three Screen Actors Guild Awards, and one Golden Globe Award. The show debuted in 1999 and was broadcast until 2007. For his depiction of Soprano, “Entertainment Weekly” listed him as the 42nd Greatest TV Icon of All Time.
1963 – “The Outer Limits” premiers on TV. You may be getting tired of this inclusion, however, my father Lawrence Menkin wrote several of the episodes and provided story lines for others. He came to Hollywood right after the War, didn’t like it, did some movie work for Barbara Streisand, didn’t like it, went back to New York City, where he was very well known locally, left for Hollywood TV in 1955 and stayed very active for ten years, the basically retired and taught at San Francisco State College and had his own actors/comedy workshop, while he worked on books (that were
never published).
http://www.theouterlimits.com/noflash/episode.html.
1963 – In the last Major League game at the Polo Grounds, 1,752 fans saw the Phillies beat the Mets, 5-1. Jim Hickman hit the final New York home run in the historic park as the Mets opened Shea Stadium in Queens for the 1964 season.
1964 – North Vietnamese Army began infiltration of South Vietnam.
1964 - “The Addams Family” premiered on TV. Charles Addams' quirky New Yorker cartoon creations were brought to life in this ABC sitcom about a family full of oddballs. John Astin played lawyer Gomez Addams, with Carolyn Jones as his morbid wife Morticia, Ken Weatherwax as son Pugsley, Lisa Loring as daughter Wednesday, Jackie Coogan as Uncle Fester, Ted Cassidy as both Lurch, the butler, and Thing, a disembodied hand, Blossom Rock as Grandmamma and Felix Silla as Cousin Itt. Although the last episode aired Sept 2,1966, “The Addams Family” movie was released in 1991, starring Anjelica Huston as Morticia, Raul Julia as Gomez, Christopher Lloyd as Uncle Fester, Jimmy Workman as Pugsley and Christina Ricci as Wednesday.
1965 - Premier of TV Show “Get Smart,” a spy-thriller spoof appearing on both NBC (1965-69) and CBS (1969-70.) Don Adams starred as bumbling CONTROL Agent 86, Maxwell Smart. His mission was to thwart the evildoings of the KAOS organization. Agent Smart was usually successful with the help of his friends, Barbara Feldon as Agent 99 (whom Smart eventually married), Edward Platt as the Chief, Robert Karvelas as Agent Larrabee, Dick Gautier as Hymie the Robot and David Ketchum as Agent 13. Gimmicks included agents in garbage cans that you did not see, the “Cone of Silence” so no one could wire tape the conversations, a telephone in the sole of a shoe (way before wireless the size of a cigarette pack) and no one was shot or killed (remember, it was a comedy).
1965 - Larry Hagman (Captain Tony Nelson) and Barbara Eden (Jeannie) starred in the first episode of "I Dream of Jeannie" on NBC-TV. Capt. Nelson had been forced to make a parachute landing on a desert island. He happened upon an old bottle that had washed up on the shore. He popped the top and - bingo! Out popped Jeannie, a 2000-year-old, very pretty genie. Jeannie took to Tony and started making weekly magic that lasted until September 1, 1970.
1966 - Herb Alpert's European tour culminated in a performance before Princess Grace and the royal family in Monaco. From Washington to the Riviera, it seemed that no place was out of place for Alpert's ‘Ameriachi' sound.
1967 - The popular soap opera “Love Is a Many Splendored Thing” premiered. It was created by veteran writer lrna Phillips, airing on CBS for five years. It was based on the 1955 film starring William Holden and Jennifer Jones. lrna Phillips left the show after the network nixed interracial romance in favor of political storylines. David Birney, Leslie Charleson, Bibi Besch and Donna Mills have all appeared on the show.
1968 - Top Hits
“People Got to Be Free” - The Rascals
“Harper Valley P.T.A.” - Jeannie C. Riley
“1,2,3, Red Light” - 1910 Fruitgum Co.
“Mama Tried” - Merle Haggard
1969 - Tiny Tim announced his engagement to Vicki Budinger at the New Jersey State Fair. The falsetto-voiced singer said he was so moved, he shed a tear and put it into an envelope that he kept in his ukulele. The wedding took place live on Johnny Carson's "The Tonight Show."
1970 - Jimi Hendrix, rock music's most innovative guitarist in the late 1960's, was found dead in a London apartment at the age of 27. He had left the message "I need help bad, man" on his manager Chas Chandler's answering machine. The coroner said Hendrix choked on his own vomit after barbiturate intoxication. A month earlier, Hendrix had performed his last concert at the Isle of Wight Pop Festival. Hendrix, born in Seattle, Washington, had first gained fame in Britain in early 1967 when "Hey Joe" by the Jimi Hendrix Experience reached number six on the British chart. He did not perform in the US until June that year, at the Monterrey Pop Festival. He ended his appearance by burning his guitar. Hendrix's guitar heroics and flamboyant stage antics soon made him a superstar. But Hendrix, who considered himself more a musician than a showman, began ridding himself of his stage theatrics in 1968, concentrating on his music. He also appeared and did an album with the Canadian born great jazz composer/arranger Gil Evans. The Hendrix Experience fell apart in 1969, and Hendrix followed that group with Band of Gypsies, which stayed together for only a few months. His "Purple Haze" and "Foxy Lady" became anthems for a generation at war in Vietnam.
1970 - After scoring 12 US number one hits with The Supremes, Diana Ross has her first solo US chart topper with "Ain't No Mountain High Enough."
1971 - Pink Floyd became the first rock group to play at the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. They performed "Atom Heart Mother," which had been released as an album the previous year.
1971 - Birthday of disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong, Piano, TX. He previously won the Tour de France seven consecutive times from 1999 to 2005, but was stripped of those victories in 2012 after a protracted doping scandal.
1975 - Publishing heiress Patricia Hearst was rescued/captured by the FBI in San Francisco, CA. She had been kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army on Feb 4, 1974, but had apparently fallen in with her captors and had participated in a bank holdup. Hearst was convicted of bank robbery on Mar 20, 1976. On Feb 1, 1979, her sentence was commuted to time served by President Jimmy Carter, but her conviction stood. On Jan 20, 2001, outgoing President Bill Clinton granted Patricia Hearst a full pardon, as he did for dozens of others.
1976 - Boston's "More Than a Feeling" is released in the US, where it will reach #5.
1976 - Top Hits
“Play That Funky Music” - Wild Cherry
“I'd Really Love to See You Tonight” - England Dan & John Ford Coley
“A Fifth of Beethoven” - Walter Murphy & The Big Apple Band
“I Don't Want to Have to Marry You” - Jim Ed Brown/Helen Cornelius
1977 - The Voyager I spacecraft, launched on Sep 5, 1977 from Cape Canaveral, FL, snapped the first photograph showing the earth and moon together. Having operated for over 38 years, the spacecraft still communicates with the Deep Space Network to receive routine commands and return data. At a distance of 132 AU (1.97×1010 km; 0.00209 light years) as of summer 2015, it is the farthest spacecraft from Earth.
1984 - Top Hits
“What's Love Got to Do with It” - Tina Turner
“Missing You” - John Waite
“She Bop” - Cyndi Lauper
“You're Getting to Me Again” - Jim Glaser
1993 - Garth Brooks' "In Pieces" debuted at #1 in the U.S. on both the "Billboard" "Hot 200" and Country LP charts. The album has sold over 8 million copies.
1995 - Shania Twain won in five of the seven categories in which she was nominated at the Canadian Country Music Awards in Hamilton. The Timmins, Ontario, singer took the honors for female vocalist of the year, as well as best single and video for "Any Man of Mine" and album of the year for "The Woman in Me." Twain and her producer-husband Mutt Lange won for song of the year - "Whose Bed Have Your Boots Been Under."
1996 - Tupac Shakur's video "I Ain't Mad," which depicts the rapper being shot as he leaves a nightclub, premiered on MTV five days after he died of gunshot wounds in a Las Vegas hospital. The video was made about a month before Shakur was gunned down in a drive-by shooting on the Las Vegas strip.
1996 - Pitcher Roger Clemens of the Boston Red Sox tied his own record for most strikeouts in a 9-inning game when he struck out 20 Detroit Tigers in a 4-0 Red Sox victory. Clemens set the record on April 29, 1986, against the Seattle Mariners.
1997 - The Rolling Stones played a small Chicago club as a prelude to their "Bridges to Babylon" world tour. Those who were lucky enough to get into the Double Door paid just $7.
1997 – Ted Turner donated $1 billion to the UN.
1999 - Slammin' Sammy Sosa becomes the first player in major league history to hit 60 homers twice. The Cub outfielder hits his milestone round-tripper off Brewer hurler Jason Bere.
1999 - Tampa Bay P Jim Morris made his Major League debut by fanning Royce Clayton in the 8th inning. At 36, he became the oldest rookie pitcher since Diomedes Olivo (age 40) with in 1960. Morris was a high school baseball coach and science teacher just four months ago when he tried out at the urging of his players. His life story turned into a movie, “The Rookie,” with Dennis Quaid in the starring role.
2001 – The first mailing of anthrax, traced to Trenton, NJ, started the 2001 anthrax attacks in the post-9/11 US. Letters containing anthrax spores were mailed to several news media offices and two Democratic Senators, killing five people and infecting 17 others. The FBI described the ensuing investigation as "one of the largest and most complex in the history of law enforcement.” Bruce E. Ivins, a scientist who worked at the government's biodefense labs at Fort Detrick, MD, became a focus of investigation around April 4, 2005. On April 11, 2007, Ivins was put under periodic surveillance and an FBI document stated that "Bruce Edwards Ivins is an extremely sensitive suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks.” On July 29, 2008, Ivins committed suicide. On August 6, 2008, based on DNA evidence leading to an anthrax vial in Ivins's lab, federal prosecutors declared Ivins to be the sole culprit of the crime.
2009 – Soap opera “The Guiding Light” ended after 72 years.
2014 - Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba began trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Its pre-IPO market valuation of almost $168 billion exceeded that of American e-commerce giant Amazon by over $17 billion. Then US tech giant Yahoo! earned $26 billion for the sale of its equity in Alibaba.
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