Monday, August 29, 2022
Today's Leasing News Headlines
The Top Five Leasing/Finance Funder Websites
In North America
Alexa Internet Rankings May, 2022 Announcement
76 Similar Websites
FTC Declines to Extend Comment Period on
the Sales Price of Vehicles for Dealers and Lessors
By Edward P. Kaye and Sloan Schickler
Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Excellent Compensation/Marketing Support/Work from Home
Job Boards---Be Careful
Career Crossroads---By Emily Fitzpatrick/RII
Top Ten Leasing News Read by Readers
August 22 to August 26
The Most Popular Dog Breeds in the U.S.
Dog Breeds Most Often Registered 2010 and 2020
Labrador Retriever
Lincoln, California Adopt-a-dog
Top-Notch Presenters at Commercial Financing Expo
Meet Them in Las Vegas, Nevada, September 7-8
News Briefs---
Airlines Keep Flight Cuts, Other Curbs as Industry Woes Drag On
Carriers are sticking with their recovery playbook
Warehouse Bottlenecks Are Snarling U.S. Supply Chains
Capacity constraints have moved as companies tie up transport equipment
You Love iPhone. Your Partner Loves Android. Here’s How to Make It Work
Pros and cons of Apple/Android—and how people can find neutral apps that work with both
NBC Considers Cutting Back Programming Hours in Prime Time
Network has discussed giving 10 p.m. hour to local station partners
Mickey Mantle baseball card sells
for record-smashing $12.0 million
You May Have Missed ---
You Want an Electric Car With a 300-Mile Range?
When Was the Last Time You Drove 300 Miles?
Broker/Funder/Industry Lists | Features (wrilter's columns)
Top Ten Stories Chosen by Readers | Top Stories last six months
Sales Make It Happen
Sports Brief----
California Nuts Brief---
"Gimme that wine"
This Day in History
SuDoku
Daily Puzzle
GasBuddy
Weather, USA or specific area
Traffic Live----
Wordle
######## 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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The Top Five Leasing/Finance Funder Websites
In North America
Alexa Rank is a rank (number) used to measure the popularity of a website among millions of other websites on Internet. For example, a website with a rank of 1 means it is the most popular website on Internet (i.e. google.com) and is on the first position of the Alexa global rank. It is similar to golf, the lower the number, the better the score.
The following are funder ratings below 1,000 from siteworth traffic on three month rating average:
Clicklease
108,027
National Funding
266,984
Balboa Capital
672,455
Crestmark Capital
722,506
Timepayment
726,652
Balboa Capital moves into third position. Not on the list this month, Balboa Capital Solutions. The website no longer appears. Marlin Capital Solutions was "consolidated" as PEAC Solutions; the announcement made July 26, 2022. Today, the website no longer exists except for for a message "to hang in there."
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If your company is a recognized Funder and has less than a 1,000 rating, please email kitmenkin@leasingnews.org to be included in the next Company listing.
It should be noted bank owned and subsidiaries often are in the bank internet listing, as well as both brokers and super brokers are not included.
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Alexa Internet Ranking May, 2022 Announcement
76 Similar Websites
Alexa Internet retired its website research and analysis tools on May 1, 2022. The service was well known among digital marketers for its Alexa Rank score. It affected many who used their free search capabilities that allowed users to put the Alexa link on their website in order to see the rankings, as well as their competitors.
Aleax Rank alternatives:
https://www.coywolf.news/seo/amazon-alexa-rank-end-of-life/#h-alexa-rank-alternatives
In their announcement Amazon stated the Alexa API, which is used to pull rankings from will officialyl end in December 2022. LeasingNews uses siteworthtraffic.com, which uses a combination of sources, inlcuding Alexa Ranks.
Those seeking to use the ability to learn about their world-wide and US rankings should continue to use siteworthtraffic.com, but look for a replacement.
Top 76 Similar websites like siteworthtraffic.com and alternatives
https://www.sitelike.org/similar/siteworthtraffic.com/
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FTC Declines to Extend Comment Period on
the Sales Price of Vehicles for Dealers and Lessors
By Edward P. Kaye and Sloan Schickler
The action to move forward may have a major impact on auto sales, leasing, financing and Lease Here, Pay Here dealers as, among other things, it will impose significant restrictions on how dealers disclose a laundry list of fees during the sales process, fees the FTC labels “junk fees.”
The public comment period was set to expire September 12th and several industry stakeholders and associations, including the National Auto Dealers Association (“NADA”) requested that the
FTC extend the comment period.
The FTC announced “It has received requests from stakeholders asking to extend the deadline, as well as from stakeholders asking to keep the deadline as is. The Commission also notes that
by the time the public comment period closes, members of the public will have had 80 days to review the proposed rule.”
The Commission vote to decline the extension of the comment period was 5-0.
In response to this decision, NADA President and CEO, Mike Stanton stated, “[t]he FTC’s refusal to grant a routine extension of a public comment period, particularly for a proposed rule of such sweeping magnitude that involved no advanced notice, further displays an unnecessary and misguided rush to judgement in this matter.
This proposed rule would cause great harm to the process by significantly extending transaction times, making the lessee or customer experience much more complex and inefficient, and increasing prices, and NADA again urges the FTC to go back
to the drawing board before forcing a series of unstudied and untested mandates lacking evidence that will have such significant negative impacts on customers.”
Is this another step toward the rise of direct-to-user auto sales? Will this rule advance transparent pricing? Or will dealers and lessors, entrepreneurial by nature, figure out a way to comply with the rules and maintain their current profit margins?
Ed Kaye and Sloan Schickler are partners in the vehicle finance law firm, Schickler Kaye LLP (www.skfinancelaw.com). Schickler, a veteran vehicle leasing, finance and bank attorney, has been the NVLA Legal and Legislative counsel since 2017 and currently sits on the board of directors. Kaye is the former CEO and General Counsel of a prominent independent vehicle leasing company and past president of the NVLA. He currently sits on the NVLA board of directors. Together, they provide decades of experience representing and protecting lessors, banks and finance companies in all facets of the vehicle leasing and financing business.
They can be reached at sschickler@skfinancelaw.com,
ekaye@skfinancelaw.com or 212-262-6400.
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Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Excellent Compensation/Marketing Support/Work
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Job Boards---Be Careful
Career Crossroads---By Emily Fitzpatrick/RII
Question: Should I post my resume on Job Boards?
Answer: We recommend NOT posting your resume on Job Boards.
Job Boards came soon after the age of the Internet, e.g. Monster, Career Builder. They have slowly lost momentum as Candidates realize they were being publicly tagged as “ACTIVE” (looking for a position) when they posted their resumes on these public forums.
Not such a great idea:
(1) Current employers will be alerted, and your position could be in jeopardy: your current employer may think you are actively seeking new positions – when, in fact, you may just be “open” to hearing about opportunities.
(2) You will lose control of your personal brand.
(3) A potential employer may perceive that there must be something “wrong” with you (the Candidate) that you have your resume posted.
(4) The information may be used by a person who wants to steal your identity or even to gain knowledge of where you live.
(5) It may be duplicated or stay on the internet forever (never put your home address on a document that will go on the internet.)
NOTE: Never upload your résumé to your social profiles either (e.g. Facebook, LinkedIn)
Utilize Job Boards as a research tool to review positions / companies.
Present yourself ONLY to specific companies you are interested in and to positions that you are qualified for. Furthermore, be aware there are recruiters who will send your resume out without your express permission (RII guarantees confidentiality and will never send out a resume without express permission to do so).
Emily Fitzpatrick
Sr. Recruiter
Recruiters International, Inc.
Phone: 954-885-9241
Cell: 954-612-0567
emily@riirecruit.com
Invite me to connect on LinkedIn
www.linkedin.com/pub/emily-fitzpatrick/4/671/76
Also follow us on Twitter #RIIINFO
Career Crossroads Previous Columns
http://www.leasingnews.org/Conscious-Top%20Stories/crossroad.html
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Top Ten Leasing News Read by Readers
August 22 to August 26
(1) New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_24.htm#hires
(2) When the Recipe Says
"Reduce Wine to 1/2"
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_26.htm#when
(3) No Longer taking Broker/Discounting Business
plus Leasing Companies Out of Business
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_26.htm#longer
(4) I was fired
How do I handle this in my job search?
Career Crossroads---By Emily Fitzpatrick/RII
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_22.htm#crossroads
(5) Commercial Alternative Finance Company List
To Join List: kitmenkin@leasingnews.org
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_22.htm#comm
(6)The World's Manufacturing Superpowers
Many of world’s largest brands rely on Chinese
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_22.htm#worlds
(7) ELFA Outlines What You Need to Know About Enhanced
Financial Disclosure Requirements Taking Effect in 2022
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_24.htm#elfa
(8) The Kelley Blue Book new-vehicle ATP increased
to $48,182 in July 2022
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_22.htm#kbb
(9) Elevating your Vendors
Sales Makes it Happen by Scott Wheeler, CLFP
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Aug2022/08_24.htm#pictures
(10) From a $22 Million Ferrari to a $151,200 Nissan:
Fancy Cars Go to Auction (click photos to see cars)
https://www.wsj.com/story/from-a-22-million-ferrari-to-a-151200-nissan-fancy-cars
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Over the past decades, many things have changed, but one thing has not: America’s love for the Labrador Retriever. The breed continues its hold on Americans’ hearts for the 30th straight year as the most registered dog breed with the American Kennel Club.
The German Shepherd and the Golden Retriever, previously the other top dogs in America, had to make way for trendy pooch the French bulldog.
The Cocker Spaniel is the only dog that rose to the number one spot twice - in the 1940s the breed stayed on the top of the list for several years, but was dethroned by the Beagle in the 1950s, possible aided in its rise by a new cartoon gaining popularity at the same time: Snoopy. In the 1980, the Spaniel was back on top, ending the reign of the poodle as the most adored dog in the 1960s and 70s.
Now, the lab's success run has gone on for three decades. The record has been credited to the breed's ability to hold many jobs, from bomb-sniffer to service dog to hunter as well as their popularity as a family pet.
Katharina Buchholz
Statista
katharina.buchholz@statista.com
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Labrador Retriever
Lincoln, California Adopt-a-dog
Juniper
Female
2 Years old
69 lbs.
crate-trained
house-trained
good with other dogs
Juniper is a black female lab about 2 years old weighing 69 pounds. She found her way to a city shelter that was over crowded where no one came for her. Juniper is a sweet, happy, friendly girl just wanting to be part of a family. She is crate trained and house trained. She is dog friendly (loves to play!) and people friendly. She is a bit of a silly girl chasing anything that fly’s in the yard, especially dragon flies and she will entertain herself for quite a while. She loves to fetch and also likes to play in the water. Juniper is looking for her furever home where she will be cherished.
Labs 2 Love Rescue, Inc.
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 232
Lincoln, CA 95648-0232
adopt@labs2loverescue.org
If you have questions that are not answered on our website about our organization, please e-mail us at: president@labs2loverescue.org
About the Breed:
The Labrador Retriever or simply Labrador is a British breed of retriever gun dog. It was developed in the United Kingdom from fishing dogs imported from the colony of Newfoundland, and was named after the Labrador region of that colony.
Wikipedia
Labrador Retriever
https://www.petfinder.com/dog-breeds/labrador-retriever/
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This Day in History
1708 - Haverhill, Mass., was destroyed by French and Indians.
1758 - New Jersey Legislature formed the first Indian reservation at, oddly enough, Indian Mills, NJ…that’s right, New Jersey!!
1776 - General George Washington retreated during the night from Long Island to New York City, withdrawing from Manhattan to Westchester.
1786 - Shays’ Rebellion: Daniel Shays, veteran of the battles of Lexington, Bunker Hill, Ticonderoga and Saratoga, was one of the leaders of more than 1,000 rebels who sought redress of grievances during the depression days of 1786—87. He began organizing his followers with speeches this day. They prevented general court sessions and on Sept 26, they prevented Supreme Court sessions at Springfield, MA. On Jan 25, 1787, with 1100 men, they attacked the federal arsenal at Springfield; Feb 2, Shays’ troops were routed and fled. Shays was sentenced to death but pardoned June 13, 1788. The uprising had been caused by the harsh economic conditions faced by Massachusetts farmers, who sought reforms and the issuance of paper money. Shays later received a small pension for services in the American Revolution.
1809 - Birthday of Oliver Wendell Holmes (d. 1894), physician and author, father of Supreme Court justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, at Cambridge, MA. “A moment’s insight,” he wrote, “is sometimes worth a life’s experience.”
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.com/owholmes.htm
http://www.eldritchpress.org/owh/owhhes.html
1811 – Birthday of Henry Bergh (d. 1888), founder of the ASPCA, in NYC. He was President Lincoln’s ambassador to Russia when the severe climate forced him home. On returning to the United States, Bergh resolved to work on behalf of animal welfare. Alone, in the face of indifference, opposition, and ridicule, he began working as a speaker and lecturer, but most of all in the street and the courtroom, and before the legislature. The legislature passed the laws prepared by him, and on 10 April 1866, the ASPCA was legally organized, with Bergh as president.
1815 - Anna Ella Carroll’s (d. 1894) birthday, near Pokomoke City, MD. Writer and publicist for Union causes during the Civil War. She is best known for her pamphlet which outlined the proposition that the Southern states would resume their original places in the United States once the rebellion of the Civil War was over, precisely the course adopted by Abraham Lincoln in superseding Congress in the conduct of the war. She is credited with the plan to invade the South along the Tennessee River. Her tombstone reads "Maryland's Most Distinguished Lady." However, she died financially poor and anonymous in 1894.
http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/educ/exhibits/womenshall/html/carroll.html
http://nabbhistory.salisbury.edu/
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/external-search/103-5362656-4423850?tag=fast-b
kasin00-20&keyword=Anna%20Ella%20Carroll&mode=books
1817 - The first “abolition” newspaper was “The Philanthropist,” published and edited by Charles Osborn, which appeared in Mount Pleasant, OH. It published “An Appeal to Philanthropists” by Benjamin Lundy, which is said by some to be the most powerful abolition appeal ever made.
1831 – Michael Faraday discovers electromagnetic induction. Although Faraday received little formal education, he was one of the most influential scientists in history. It was by his research on the magnetic field around a conductor carrying a direct current that Faraday established the basis for the concept of the electromagnetic field in physics. Faraday also established that magnetism could affect rays of light and that there was an underlying relationship between the two phenomena. It was largely due to his efforts that electricity became practical for use in technology. As a chemist, Faraday discovered benzene, investigated chlorine, invented an early form of the Bunsen burner and the system of oxidation numbers, and popularized terminology such as anode, cathode, electrode, and ion.
1839 - In January, 53 Africans were seized near modern-day Sierra Leone, taken to Cuba and sold as slaves. While being transferred to another part of the island on the ship Amistad, led by the African, Cinque, they seized control of the ship, telling the crew to take them back to Africa. However, the crew secretly changed course and the ship landed at Long Island, NY, where it and its ‘cargo’ were seized as salvage this day. The Amistad was towed to New Haven, CT where the Africans were imprisoned and a lengthy legal battle began to determine if they were property to be returned to Cuba or free men. John Quincy Adams took their case all the way to the Supreme Court, where on Mar 9, 1841, it was determined that they were free and could return to Africa.
1852 - The Latter Day Saints first published their doctrine of "celestial marriage," popularly known as polygamy. The Mormon Church maintained this teaching until the Manifest of 1890 (and later Congressional legislation) outlawed the practice.
1861 - The first Confederate forts to surrender in the Civil War were Fort Clark and Fort Hatteras on Hatteras Island, NC, guarding Pamlico Sound. They surrendered to Flag Officer Silas H. Stringham and General Benjamin Franklin Butler, who had captured the garrison with 715 men, 31 heavy guns, and 1,000 stands of arms.
1862 - (29th-30th) At the second Battle of Bull Run, the maneuvers of General Stonewall Jackson and his teamwork with General Robert E. Lee were too much for the 45,000 Union troops under General John Pope, who broke and retreated to Washington, DC. Union losses were 1724 killed, 8372 wounded, 5958 missing. Confederate losses stood at 1481 killed, 7627 wounded, 89 missing.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0857066.html
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0839705.html
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0252023633/jimbo2/104-1979401-1205565
1869 – The Mount Washington Cog Railway opens in New Hampshire, making it the world's first rack railway. The railway is still in operation, climbing Mt. Washington.
1896 - History records chop suey was concocted in New York City by the chef of Chinese Ambassador Li Hung-Chang, who devised the dish to appeal to both American and Asian tastes. Chop suey was unknown in China at the time.
1898 – The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company was founded.
1904 - Third modern Olympic Games open in St Louis. These Games were originally scheduled for Chicago. However, President Theodore Roosevelt intervened on behalf of St. Louis so that the Games would be in conjunction with the Louisiana Purchase Exhibition. Again the Games were upstaged, this time by the St. Louis World’s Fair, and critics believed this would kill the fourth Olympics from taking place. The marathon included the first two Africans to compete in the Olympics – two Zulu tribesman named Lentauw (real name: Len Taunyane) and Yamasani (real name: Jan Mashiani). They wore bibs 35 and 36, respectively.
The only problem was that these two tribesmen were not in town to compete in the Olympics – they were actually the sideshow! Yes, they were imported by the exposition as part of the Boer War exhibit (both were really students at Orange Free State in South Africa, but no one wanted to believe that these tribesmen could actually be educated – it would have ruined the whole image). Lentauw finished ninth and Yamasani came in twelfth. This was a disappointment, as many observers were sure Lentauw could have done better – that is if he had not been chased nearly a mile off course by a large, aggressive canine!
The marathon was over, but there is still one more little story to go along with this: It seems that two of the patrolling officials driving in a brand-new automobile were forced to swerve to avoid hitting one of the runners – they ended up going down an embankment and were severely injured.
In the end, the St. Louis Olympics (along with the previous Paris games) proved to be such a disaster that the Olympic Committee was forced to hold interim Olympic Games in 1906 at Athens, in an attempt to revive the flagging Olympic movement. These games were not numbered, but were attended by twenty countries and put the Olympics back on a steady course to success. An interesting useless side note: Iced tea made its debut at the 1904 Exposition. It seems that it was so hot during the Expo that the staff at the Far East Tea House couldn’t even give away their product.
1911 – Ishi, considered the last Native American to make contact with European Americans, emerges from the wilderness of northeastern California…and he had no statement on the name of Washington’s NFL team!!
1915 – The US Navy raises F-4, the first U.S. submarine sunk in an accident.
1915 – Birthday of actress Ingrid Bergman (d. 1982) at Stockholm, Sweden. She won three Academy Awards, two Emmy Awards, four Golden Globes, and the Tony Award for Best Actress. She is ranked as the fourth greatest female star of American cinema of all time by the American Film Institute. She is best remembered for her roles as Ilsa Lund in “Casablanca” (1942), co-starring Humphrey Bogart, and as Alicia Huberman in “Notorious” (1946), an Alfred Hitchcock thriller co-starring Cary Grant.
1916 – US passes the Philippine Autonomy Act.
1917 – Weezie’s birthday: Actress Isabel Sanford (d. 2009) was born in Harlem, NYC. Lead role in “The Jeffersons,” in 1981, she became the first African-American actress to win a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series.
1920 - Birthday of Charlie Parker (d. 1955), Kansas City, MO. Clint Eastwood made a movie about his life. Known as “The Bird,” he and Dizzy Gillespie, trumpet player extraordinaire and great showman, are credited with “inventing” the style “Be-Bop.” Definitely way ahead of his time, and quite melodic (his record albums with strings from 1947 to 1952 produced by Norman Granz are jazz classics). There is controversy on how he got his name. Some say it was from sitting in the backyard of “speakeasies” in Kansas City, Kansas, where he was raised, fingering his alto sax. Others say it was his love of chicken. He was addicted to Heroin, as many of the “Be-Bop” players were. The movie “The Man with the Golden Arm” was a take-off of his life, not Chet Baker, according to the writer of the movie. He was taken to Camarillo for the Insane, where he kicked the habit, for a short time. The club Birdland in Manhattan was named after him. It is told one of his ideas to make the club more profitable was to have a Country and Western band come and play during the breaks. Parker was a profound influence upon Miles Davis, who started playing with his band at the age of 17.
http://www.kcpl.lib.mo.us/sc/bio/parker.htm
http://www.geocities.com/BourbonStreet/5066/
http://www.changingtones.com/trmpt02.html
http://www.bigmagic.com/pages/blackj/column4.html
http://www.downbeat.com/artists/window.asp?action=new&aid=117&aname=Charlie+Parker
http://www.charlieparkerresidence.net/
1921 – Birthday of Wendell Scott (d. 1990), at Danville, VA. Auto racer and the first black stock-car driver. He is the only black driver to win a race in what is now the Sprint Cup Series. NASCAR champion 12-1-63: won race but because of racial tensions did not receive honor until Jan. 1964 when NASCAR officials admitted the flagman’s intentional error. The film “Greased Lightning,” starring Richard Pryor as Scott, was loosely based on Scott's biography.
1922 - New Orleans Rhythm Kings cut first records for Gennett.
1922 –The first radio advertisement is aired on WEAF-AM in NYC
1924 – Birthday of singer Dinah Washington (d. 1963), born Ruth Lee Jones, Detroit, Michigan. Her hits include: “What A Diff’rence a Day Makes,” “It Could Happen to You,” “Our Love is Here to Stay,” “For All We Know,” “Baby [You’ve Got What It Takes],” “A Rockin’ Good Way [To Mess Around and Fall in Love],” “Baby Get Lost,” “This Bitter Earth;” w/Lionel Hampton band [1943-46].
http://www.ddg.com/LIS/InfoDesignF96/Ismael/jazz/1950/Washington.html
http://www.rockhall.com/hof/inductee.asp?id=207
1936 – Incumbent Arizona Senator John McCain was born in the Panama Canal Zone, where his father was stationed. At the time, the Canal was under US control. McCain graduated from the US Naval Academy in 1958 and began his naval career at Pensacola where he began his aviation training. On a mission during the Vietnam War, he was captured on October 26, 1967 when his plane was shot down by a missile over Hanoi. McCain fractured both arms and a leg ejecting from the aircraft, and nearly drowned when he parachuted into a lake. Some North Vietnamese pulled him ashore, then others crushed his shoulder with a rifle butt and bayoneted him. Although McCain was badly wounded, his captors refused to treat his injuries, beating and interrogating him to get information; he was given medical care only when the North Vietnamese discovered that his father was a top admiral. He was released on March 14, 1973. After retiring in 1981, he began his political career by running and winning a seat in Congress from Arizona’s First District. Upon being skewered in the press for being a carpetbagger, McCain responded, “…Listen, pal. I spent 22 years in the Navy. My father was in the Navy. My grandfather was in the Navy. We in the military service tend to move a lot. We have to live in all parts of the country, all parts of the world. I wish I could have had the luxury, like you, of growing up and living and spending my entire life in a nice place like the First District of Arizona, but I was doing other things. As a matter of fact, when I think about it now, the place I lived longest in my life was Hanoi.” His Senate career began in 1987 where he has been a leader and he has run for President twice.
1938 – Elliott Gould’s birthday in Brooklyn, NY. Aside from becoming Barbra Streisand’s first husband, Gould has had a decent career in movies. Among them: “M*A*S*H,” “Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice,” “Oceans 12,” “Oceans 13.”
1939 - A typical day at the Graham dairy farm in Georgetown, North Carolina.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/aug29.html
1940 – Former Reagan Press Secretary James Brady (d. 2014) was born in Centralia, IL. Brady was wounded severely in the 1981 assassination attempt on President Reagan in Washington, DC, suffering permanent brain damage. The resulting gun legislation bears his name as the Brady Bill.
1943 – Blood, Sweat, and Tears pianist Dick Halligan born, Troy, NY.
1944 - For the sake of diplomacy, Paris was liberated on August 25, when the German commander General Dietrich von Choltiz surrendered to French General Jacques-Phillipe Leclerc. 15,000 American troops taking part in the liberation marched down Champs Elysees.
1944 - McVElGH, JOHN J., Medal of Honor.
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company H, 23d Infantry, 2d Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Brest, France, 29 August 1944. Entered service at: Philadelphia, Pa. Birth: Philadelphia, Pa. G.O. No.: 24, 6 April 1945. Citation: For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty near Brest, France, on 29 August 1944. Shortly after dusk an enemy counterattack of platoon strength was launched against 1 platoon of Company G, 23d Infantry. Since the Company G platoon was not dug in and had just begun to assume defensive positions along a hedge, part of the line sagged momentarily under heavy fire from small arms and 2 flak guns, leaving a section of heavy machineguns holding a wide frontage without rifle protection. The enemy drive moved so swiftly that German riflemen were soon almost on top of 1 machinegun position. Sgt. McVeigh, heedless of a tremendous amount of small arms and flak fire directed toward him, stood up in full view of the enemy and directed the fire of his squad on the attacking Germans until his position was almost overrun. He then drew his trench knife. and single-handed charged several of the enemy. In a savage hand-to-hand struggle, Sgt. McVeigh killed 1 German with the knife, his only weapon, and was advancing on 3 more of the enemy when he was shot down and killed with small arms fire at pointblank range. Sgt. McVeigh's heroic act allowed the 2 remaining men in his squad to concentrate their machinegun fire on the attacking enemy and then turn their weapons on the 3 Germans in the road, killing all 3. Fire from this machinegun and the other gun of the section was almost entirely responsible for stopping this enemy assault, and allowed the rifle platoon to which it was attached time to reorganize, assume positions on and hold the high ground gained during the day.
1945 - Wyomia Tyus’ birthday, Griffin, GA. U.S. sprinter who was the first person to win Olympic gold medals in back-to-back competitions: the 100m dash in 1964 and in 1968, setting a new world's record the second time.
http://search.eb.com/blackhistory/micro/610/19.html
1946 – One of the battleships damaged at Pearl Harbor, USS Nevada, was decommissioned by the US Navy.
1948 - In St. Louis, Jackie Robinson hits for the cycle, drives in two runs, scores three times and steals a base helping the Dodgers to beat the Cardinals, 12-7.
1953 - Birthday of American composer William Copper, Lyndhurst, Virginia.
1954 - Birthday of Flora “Flo” Hyman (d. 1985), volleyball player, born at Inglewood, CA. Hyman stood 6’5” and was regarded as the best player in the US, starring on the 1984 Olympic team that won the silver medal. She suffered from Morfan’s syndrome, a hidden congenital aorta disorder.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/siforwomen/top_100/69/
1954 - San Francisco International Airport (SFO) opens. It has been continually “under construction” since this date. San Francisco has had at least three airports within the city limits during the twentieth century. Crissy Field at the Presidio dates from World War I, the Marina Flying Field from 1915, and the late 1930s saw development of the Seaplane Harbor at Treasure Island. Ingleside racetrack was also used for aviation purposes in the early part of the twentieth century. Commercial and general aviation ultimately moved to Mills Field in San Mateo County in the 1930s, which originally was temporary as the originally international airport was to be built on Treasure Island. Crissy Field at the Presidio was the last airport within the city, and ended limited operations in the 1980s.
http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist/airport.html
http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist2/airfield.html
http://www.san-francisco-sfo.com/
http://www.worldairportguide.com/Airports/sfo/sfo.asp
1956 - Top Hits
“My Prayer” - The Platters
“Hound Dog/Don’t Be Cruel” - Elvis Presley
“Allegheny Moon” - Patti Page
“I Walk the Line” - Johnny Cash
1958 - Air Force Academy moved from Denver to its present site in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
1958 – Birthday of singer/dancer Michael (Joe) Jackson (d. 2009), the ‘King of Pop’, Gary, Indiana. Joined the family act, The Jackson Five, in 1964 and started his solo career in 1971. “I Want You Back,” “ABC,” “The Love You Save,” “ I’ll Be There,” solo: Ben; Grammy Award: Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough [1979]; 5 Grammy Awards in 1983: “Thriller,” ”Billie Jean,” “E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial;” 2 in 1984: ”Beat It”; another in 1985 [w/Lionel Richie]: “We are the World”); 1989 Best Music Video/Short Form Grammy: “Leave Me Alone”; “The Legend,” Award Grammy; “The Girl is Mine”, “Stay, Stay, Stay” [w/Paul McCartney], “I Just Can’t Stop Loving You” [w/Siedah Garrett], Rock with You, Bad, Smooth Criminal, Ease on Down the Road [w/Diana Ross - from Broadway’s The Wiz]; Captain Eo in Epcot Center’s multimedia show; married and divorced Lisa Marie Presley; inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Mar 19, 2001. Died from an overdose after cardiac arrest in June 25, 2009.
1958 - Alan Freed's "Big Beat Show" opens at the Fox Theatre in Brooklyn. The usual venue, The Paramount, is vacated because management didn't like the fact there was a riot after Freed's Boston concert. The opener in Brooklyn brought in $200,000 and those performing included Frankie Avalon, Jimmy Clanton, Bobby Freeman, the Elegants, Bill Haley & the Comets and Chuck Berry.
1958 - John Lennon and Paul McCartney of a Liverpool band called the Quarrymen, welcome George Harrison to the group.
1959 - Horace Silver Quintet records “Blowin’ the Blues Away.”
1960 - Birthday of American composer William Susman, Chicago, IL.
1962 - Malvin Russell “Mel” Goode of Pittsburgh, PA, became the first African-American to be a television news commentator when he was assigned by WABC-TV to the United Nations staff, New York City.
1962 - Elvis' tenth movie, “Kid Galahad,” opens in US theaters, featuring the King as an amateur boxer. Charles Bronson also stars.
1962 - Hackberry, LA, was deluged with twenty-two inches of rain in 24 hours, establishing a state record.
1964 - Top Hits
“Where Did Our Love Go” - The Supremes
“The House of the Rising Sun” - The Animals
“C’mon and Swim” - Bobby Freeman
“I Guess I’m Crazy” - Jim Reeves
1964 - Walt Disney's supercalifragilisticexpialidocious "Mary Poppins" released. http://us.imdb.com/Details?0058331
1964 - Roy Orbison’s "Oh, Pretty Woman" was released. It hit number one (for 3 weeks) on September 26th and became the biggest of his career. "Oh, Pretty Woman" was Orbison’s second #1 hit. The other was "Running Scared" (6/05/61).
1964 - In a clear case of rock and roll being saved by the British Invasion, Billboard magazine notes that guitar sales are the highest they've been since the advent of Elvis Presley.
1965 – San Francisco Giant Willie Mays breaks former Pirate Ralph Kiner’s record for home runs in the month of August when the 'Say Hey Kid' connects for his 17th round tripper in an 8-3 victory over the Mets.
1965 - Cool wave brought 2.5 inches of snow to Mt. Washington for an August record. It reached 25 in Vermont, the earliest freeze on record in many locations.
1965 - The Gemini V spacecraft returns to Earth.
1966 - The Beatles performed at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, CA. It was the group’s last live appearance before they disbanded in 1970. Also appearing were The Ronettes and the Remains. Ticket purchases by mail were available from KYA, No. 1 Nob Hill Circle, San Francisco
http://www.televideos.com/prod01.htm
1966 - The last episode of ABC-TV's musical variety show “Hullabaloo” airs, featuring guest stars Lesley Gore, Paul Anka, Peter and Gordon, and The Cyrkle.
1967 - Final TV episode of "The Fugitive." The series originally started on September, 1963. Dr. Richard Kimble (David Janssen) was wrongly convicted and sentenced to death for his wife’s murder, but escaped from his captors in a train wreck. This popular program aired for four years detailing Kimble’s search for the one-armed man (Bill Raisch) who had killed his wife, Helen (Diane Brewster). In the meantime, Kimble himself, was being pursued by Lieutenant Phillip Gerard (Barry Morse). The final episode aired this day in 1967 featured Kimble extracting a confession from the one-armed man as they struggled from the heights of a water tower in a deserted amusement park. That single episode was the highest-rated show ever broadcast until 1975. The TV series generated a hit movie in 1993 with Harrison Ford as Kimble and Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones as Gerard.
1967 – At a time when they scheduled doubleheaders in Major League Baseball, the Yankees and the Red Sox played the longest in Yankees’ history. Red Sox take the 1st game 2-1 in 9, Yankees win 2nd game in 20 innings, 4-3, taking a total of 8 hours and 19 minutes.
1968 - Democratic Party National Convention: Antiwar protesters clashed with police and national guardsmen in the streets outside, and hundreds of people, including innocent bystanders and members of the press, were brutally beaten by Chicago’s finest.
1968 - Cream and Electric Flag opened at Fillmore West, San Francisco.
1969 - To compete with Johnny Carson (NBC) and Joey Bishop (ABC), CBS-TV presented Merv Griffin on late-night TV. Johnny ruled -- staying on top for almost 23 years to come.
1970 – Chicano Moratorium against the Vietnam War was staged in East Los Angeles. Police riot kills three people, including journalist Ruben Salazar.
1971 - Hank Aaron became the first baseball player in the National League to drive in 100 or more runs in each of 11 seasons.
1971 - No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey,'' Paul & Linda McCartney. McCartney had a real Uncle Albert, who he said would quote the Bible when he got drunk.
1972 - Top Hits
“Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl)” - Looking Glass
“Alone Again (Naturally)” - Gilbert O’Sullivan
“Long Cool Woman (In a Black Dress)” - The Hollies
“If You Leave Me Tonight I’ll Cry” - Jerry Wallace
1972 - President Richard Nixon announced that a White House investigation of the Watergate break-in, conducted by White House counsel John Dean, revealed that administration officials were not involved in the burglary.
1974 - 600 Catholic nuns adopt a resolution calling for the ordination of women priests in the Roman Catholic Church.
1974 - Moses Malone became the first basketball player to jump from high school to professional basketball, skipping college to sign a contract with the Utah Stars of the ABA.
1977 - Lou Brock stole the 893rd base of his career, surpassing Ty Cobb’s modern record for career stolen bases. Ricky Henderson in 1982 breaks Brock’s for stealing the most bases in one season with 122.
1979 - Sheridan Broadcasting Corp purchases Mutual Black Network, making it the first completely Black-owned radio network in the world.
1980 - Top Hits
“Magic” - Olivia Newton-John
“Sailing” - Christopher Cross
“Take Your Time (Do It Right)” - The S.O.S. Band
“Drivin’ My Life Away” - Eddie Rabbitt
1981 - The Pretenders "II" LP enters the chart.
1981 - The soundtrack to the film, "Heavy Metal" enters the album charts. The LP features tracks by Stevie Nicks, Cheap Trick, Devo and Sammy Hagar.
1982 - No. 1 Billboard Pop Hit: “Abracadabra,'' Steve Miller Band.
1984 - Edwin Moses won the 400-meter hurdles in track competition in Europe. It was the track star’s 108th consecutive victory.
1984 - High temperature at Topeka, KS reaches 110 degrees for the first time since the dust bowl of the 30's.
1986 - The former "American Bandstand" studio, at the original home of WFIL-TV in Philadelphia, PA, was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. The studio is located at 4548 Market Street.
1987 - Los Lobos' remake of Ritchie Valens' 1959 classic, "La Bamba" hits #1 on the pop singles chart and stays there for three weeks.
1987 – Nolan Ryan passes the 200 strikeout mark in a season for a record eleventh time.
1987 - Some of the most powerful thunderstorms in several years developed over the piedmont of North Carolina, and marched across central sections of the state during the late afternoon and evening hours. Baseball size hail was reported around Albemarle, while thunderstorm winds downed giant trees around High Falls.
1988 - Cool air invaded the north central U.S. Ten cities reported record low temperatures for the date, including Bismarck, ND with a reading of 33 degrees. Deerfield, a small town in the Black Hills of South Dakota, reported a low of 23 degrees. The remnants of Tropical Storm Chris drenched eastern Pennsylvania with up to five and a half inches of rain, and produced high winds which gusted to 90 mph, severely damaging a hundred boats in Anne Arundel County, MD.
1988 - Top Hits
“Monkey” - George Michael
“I Don’t Wanna to Go on with You like That” - Elton John
“I Don’t Wanna Live Without Your Love” - Chicago
“The Wanderer” - Eddie Rabbitt
1989 - In a special election, Ileana Rose Lehtinen (R-FL) becomes the first Cuban-American elected to the U.S. Congress.
1990 - Saddam Hussein declares America can't beat Iraq. By the end of 1990, 580,000 Iraqi troops were believed to be in Kuwait or southern Iraq. Facing them were 485,000 troops of 17 allied countries. Earlier, on August 10 at a meeting in Cairo, only 12 of the 21 member nations of the Arab League voted to support American troops.
1991 - The Soviet Communist Party suspended parliament, thus ending a 75-year control of the USSR. Democratic change was sought and the struggle continues today, perhaps ending the hunt in the United States to “halt” communism. Capitalism won out but we must wait to see what President Putin has in mind for the second coming of the USSR.
1992 – Guns 'n' Roses’ "November Rain" peaks at #3 on the pop singles chart.
1994 - Viacom Inc. announced the purchase of Blockbuster Entertainment Corp., the video rental store giant, for $8 billion.
1998 - Top Hits
“I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing”- Aerosmith
“The First Night”- Monica
“Crush”- Jennifer Paige
“My Way”- Usher
2002 - To show their displeasure about tomorrow's impending strike, fans at Devil Rays-Angels game begin throwing foul balls back onto the field at Edison Field and over 100 people are ejected for throwing trash. New words are added to the traditional seventh-inning rendition of "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" as many of the fans in attendance begin to chant, "Don't strike! Don't strike! Don't strike!"
2005 - Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Plaquemines Parish in southeastern Louisiana early on the 29th with maximum sustained winds near 125 mph, a strong category-three, and the third most-intense land-falling hurricane in U.S. history. The center of the hurricane passed just east of New Orleans, where winds gusted over 100 mph. Widespread devastation and unprecedented flooding occurred, submerging at least 80 percent of the city as levees failed. Farther east, powerful winds and a devastating storm surge of 20-30 feet raked the Mississippi coastline, including Gulfport and Biloxi, where Gulf of Mexico floodwaters spread several miles inland. Rainfall amounts of 8-10 inches were common along and to the east of the storm's path. Katrina weakened to a tropical storm as it tracked northward through Mississippi and gradually lost its identity as it moved into the Tennessee Valley on the 30th.
2005 – Rock ‘n’ roll pioneer Fats Domino, 77, is rescued from his Ninth Ward home in New Orleans after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina.
2007 - Six US cruise missiles armed with nuclear warheads are flown without proper authorization from Minot AFB, North Dakota, to Barksdale AFB, Bossier City, LA.
2009 - A 1970 interview with John Lennon, in which he revealed some of the reasons that The Beatles split, appeared in Rolling Stone magazine. John said that his band mates disrespected and "insulted" his wife, Yoko Ono, adding, "They despised her... It seemed I had to be happily married to them or Yoko, and I chose Yoko." He also took a shot at his former songwriting partner, saying "We got fed up with being sidemen for Paul."
2013 - The first federal health study reporting on the use of sleeping pills reveals that 8.6 million Americans take prescription sleeping pills.
2015 – NASA isolated a six-person team for a year within a small dome in Hawaii to simulate theoretical conditions of a mission to Mars. The team had no fresh air or fresh food and a spacesuit must be worn when exiting the dome.
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