| 
  
 
 Monday, December 16, 2019
 
  
 Today's  Leasing News Headlines
 Kit Menkin's Salvation Army Kettle
 Donations Very Much Appreciated
 Looking to Improve Your Career
 Post a Free Position Wanted Here
 Top Ten Stories
 December 9 - December 13
 Top Six Leasing/Finance Company  Websites
 in North America
 Leasing News Help Wanted
 Is it Time to Consider Moving Up in 2020
 Using My LinkedIn Profile as My Resume
 Career Crossroad---By Emily Fitzpatrick/RII
 The 5 Real Reasons You Didn't Get  Hired
 By Ken Lubin, ZRG Partners
 Classes for Lease & Finance  Professionals
 Attendance Update: Classes Scheduled plus  Mentor Program
 A Real “Oldie but a Goodie”
 Laws IV
 Boxer/ChowChow
 Louisville, Kentucky
 Equipment Leasing Books for Christmas
 Still Time to Order
 News Briefs---
 Thousands of truck drivers have lost  their jobs in 2019
 as the transportation 'bloodbath' unfolds
 Here's the list of the biggest bankrupt  trucking companies
 PMCC and Amtrak $93 Million Dispute
 Stealing Parks from One Leased Train to...
 Cisco unveils plan for building  internet
 for the next decade of digital innovation
 How the Salvation Army is trying to  change
 its 'anti-LGBTQ' reputation
 Broker/Funder/Industry  Lists | Features  (wrilter's columns)Top  Ten Stories Chosen by Readers | Top  Stories last six months
 www.leasingcomplaints.com (Be Careful of Doing Business)
 www.evergreenleasingnews.org
 Leasing News Icon for  Android Mobile Device
 May Have Missed
 Poem
 Sports Brief----
 California Nuts Brief---
 "Gimme that Wine"
 This Day in  History
 SuDoku
 Daily Puzzle
 GasBuddy
 Weather, USA or specific area
 Traffic Live----
 ########  surrounding the article denotes it is a “press release,” it was not  written by Leasing News nor has the information been verified. The source noted. When an article is signed by the writer, it is considered  a “byline.” It reflects the opinion and  research of the writer.      
        
 
 
  
 
        Please send a colleague and ask them  to subscribe. We are freeEmail kitmenkin@leasingnews.org and in subject line: subscribe
 [headlines]
 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
        Kit Menkin's Salvation Army KettleDonations Very  Much Appreciated
  
 Captain Howard Bennett, Chairman, Santa Clara County
 Superior Court Judge Mary Jo Levinger, Kit Menkin, Past Chairman Ken  Kelly.
 I am holding the Emeritus Award.  This was the first such award in the San Jose four county districts ever given.  A perpetual award in his name is to be awarded for volunteer work contributed.  This was given for forty years of service serving as chairman, president,  welfare secretary, and a list of accomplishments was read. 2019  List of Donors Brian CareyEdward Castagna
 Shawn Halladay
 Rick Jones
 Teresa Kabot
 Edward Kay
 Jule Kreyling
 Bruce Kropschot
 Mitch Larkin
 Bruce Lurie
 Klaus Pache
 Dan Pulcrano
 Dean Rubin
 Jeffrey Rudin
 Please click on the  Kettle 
 Any  questions, please contact: kitmenkin@leasingnews.org
         
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Looking to Improve Your CareerPost a Free Position Wanted Here
  
 Free Career Positon Wanted goes into our Classified Ad section here
 http://leasingnews.org/Classified/Jwanted/Jwanted.htm
 It also runs once a week in the News Edition. Use your personal email address only. We encourage you to add a resume, although not necessary. If you do so, please make sure your name, address and telephone number are not included. If so, we will delete them. The reason is once the resume is placed on line: it remains in Google, as well in Leasing News Editions’ archives. A search of your name will bring up your posting, which will have your address and telephone number for years to come. It is also a good idea to create an email for the ad specifically that you can delete after use.This is “free” to those looking for a new position. Each ad is limited to (100) words.
 To post your free position wanted, please email: kitmenkin@leasingnews.org.   
 
 
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Top Ten StoriesDecember 9 - December 13
  
 (Stories most opened by readers)         (1) Recession "more likely than not"in the "next 12 to 24  months"
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_11.htm#recession
 (2) New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing  Businessand Related Industries
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_13.htm#hires
 (3) North Mill Equipment Finance AnnouncesPricing of $165 Million Securitization
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_09.htm#northmill
 (4) Another 1,000 truck drivers lost their jobs  in November,and  it's a chilling sign for the economy
 https://www.businessinsider.com/trucking-bloodbath-truck-drivers-november-jobs-report-2019-12
 (5) Before his death, legendary Fed Chief Paul  Volckerissued one last warning to the US
 https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/before-his-death-legendary-fed-chief-paul-volcker-issued-one-last-warning-to-the-us/ar-AAK269Y
 (6) The Salesperson Who Gets No RespectBy Dan Harkey
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_13.htm#salesperson
 (7) National Funding CEO David Gilbert CaddiedFor Tiger Woods for a Day
 https://debanked.com/2019/12/national-funding-ceo-david-gilbert-caddied-for-tiger-woods-for-a-day/
 (8) The Four Areas of Focus For 2020Where to Look for Planning and Ideas  Generation
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_09.htm#four
 (9) The Home StretchSales Makes it Happen by Scott Wheeler, CLFP
 http://leasingnews.org/archives/Dec2019/12_11.htm#experienced
 (10) Trucking giant Celadon files for bankruptcyafter ex-officials charged with fraud-4,000  employees
 https://nypost.com/2019/12/09/trucking-giant-celadon-files-for-bankruptcy-after-ex-officials-charged-with-fraud/
 
 
 
  
    
      | 
 Assure the quality of your communication content…grammar, spelling, syntax, punctuation…hire an expert. Whether website content, business or technical writings, take advantage of over forty years executive writing, proofreading and editing in the EFL industry…with the reader’s time and comprehension in focus.
 Ralph P. Mango
 ralphmango@hotmail.com
 Associate Editor Leasing News, responsible for proofreading and editing each news edition, as well as contributing content.
 
 |  [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 
        Help Wanted 
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Top Six Leasing/Finance  Company Websitesin North America
  
 There are two  changes in the listing from September, 2019. First, all but one  (GreatAmerica  Financial Services" on siteworth traffic" was better, except for  GreatAmerica Financial Services that fell to number six, going from 738,417 to  853,785.(1) The lower the number, the higher the company is on the list. The top six leasing/finance  companies were taken from “siteworth traffic” three Month Siteworthtraffic.com ratings  (2). They were chosen from the Leasing  News Funder List and over 100 were checked for ratings under 1,000 (3). If your  company has less than a 1,000 rating, please email kitmenkin@leasingnews.org to  be included in the next Leasing/Finance Company listing. With the  mergers, many have not been able to be rated. For instance, for several years Direct Capital and CIT went back and  forth from being first to being second. Neither are on the list today as Direct Capital was purchased by CIT  Bank and then CIT Finance fell under CIT Bank website. Many of these merged companies lost their  separate website identity and fell under the bank's website. Alexa USA Rankings        https://marlincapitalsolutions.com/
 325,362
  www.crestcapital.com
 384,345
  www.balboacapital.com
 440,190
  www.AscentiumCapital.com
 547,389
  www.finpac.com
 825,313
  www.greatamerica.com
 853,785
   
         http://leasingnews.org/archives/Sep2019/09_25.htm#siteshttp://www.siteworthtraffic.com/Funder List "A"http://leasingnews.org/Funders_Only/Funders.htm
 
  
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Using My LinkedIn  Profile as My Resume  
 Career Crossroad---By  Emily Fitzpatrick/RII Question: Can  I use my LinkedIn profile as my resume? Answer: No,  your profile does not replace your resume. There is a tendency for Candidates  to think they can now replace a resume with a LinkedIn Profile. I strongly  recommend against this. Your profile on a social media site (e.g. LinkedIn)  does not replace a formal resume. I think sites like LinkedIn are very helpful  but a resume has a specific and different purpose. Yes, they can help each  other and can be used together. Please take  my professional advice. I know employers “hunt” social media but maybe your  current employer is also looking and finds you with a “formal resume.” That  certainly would be a “red flag.” Besides  having your formal / marketable resume, your LinkedIn profile does not always  provide information that can serve to showcase abilities that are relevant for  a particular position. You can add  assessments to one’s profile providing an opportunity to summarize traits,  skills and abilities but again are you keeping it current? Are you making sure  your on line profile is complete, accurate, and compelling? Again, It Does NOT  replace a resume – at least in today’s world. Social  networking and user profiles are still in their infancy. It wasn’t so long ago  that faxed resumes were the norm (remember mailing resumes!). Twenty years ago,  the World Wide Web as we know it didn’t exist. Twenty years from now who knows  a formal resume may become obsolete (I predict it may be much faster than  that.) So, yes, put  your biography or profile in social media but don’t give up on a current,  better aimed, resume for a specific position you may be seeking. Emily FitzpatrickSr. 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
 
 
  
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 
        The  5 Real Reasons You Didn't Get Hired By Ken Lubin, ZRG Partners
 (They aren't what you think, then  again maybe they are)
 
 
          I have been in the executive  recruiting for just about 20 years, (I can’t believe it) and have been through two  major down turns, 2001 and 2008, but the real reasons that people don’t get the  role that they interview for hasn’t changed. Here is a list of most common  complaints I hear in the marketplace from hiring teams.
 
          You Stink.  Physically you smell - too much perfume,       cologne, body odor, bad breath, smoke, and a host of other things. From a       sensory point of view, smell is the number one thing people remember most 
          You Talk Too Much.  Many people get nervous when they       interview and end up getting diarrhea of the mouth. Usually when this       happens, you need to plug it up but most often they insert their foot as a       stop gap - game over!! We have one mouth and two ears for a reason.         
          You are an A** Hole.  Arrogance is a key reason why people       don’t get hired. If you are condescending, sarcastic and drop F bombs you       are not getting the job, period         
          You are Late.  If you are       late for an interview without any good reason and don’t call the person       you are supposed to be meeting with to let them know, it shows you don’t       have any respect for people’s time and will be late for everything else 
          You are Clueless/ If you don’t do research, understand the product and       don’t know how you can offer a solution, then why did you go on the       interview anyway? Don’t waste the hiring manger’s time and more,       importantly don’t waste yours. Getting your dream job (even if it  isn’t) is difficult, so why screw it up by not having common sense and  courtesy. A first round interview is a like a first date, treat it as such.Ken Lubin
 Klubin@zrgpartners.com
           
   [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Classes for Lease &  Finance ProfessionalsAttendance Update: Classes Scheduled plus Mentor Program
  
 The Academy for  Lease & Finance Professionals (ALFP) is a three-day event designed to fully  prepare an individual to sit for the CLFP exam assuming the attendee has read  and studied The Certified Lease & Finance Professionals’ Handbook prior to  attending. On the first two  days, all of the required sections of the CLFP exam are covered in-depth. On  the third day, the exam is offered, but not mandatory. http://www.clfpfoundation.org/alfp.php January 9  - 11Private - Ascentium ALFP
 Scottsdale, Arizona
 Sold Out
 
 February  06, 2020Start: Thu, February 06, 2020
 8:00am
 End: Sat, February 08, 2020
 Location: Hosted by Fleet Advantage, LLC.
 Class Location: 401 East Las Olas Blvd
 Fort Lauderdale, FL
 Registered: 17
 Spaces left: 20
 Recommended Hotels: THE  SUPERBOWL IS IN TOWN THE PRIOR WEEKEND. MAKE SURE HOTEL RESERVATIONS ARE MADE  NOW!!!!  Last-minute  room availability will be very challenging.
 Both hotels are within a couple of blocks. Car really isn’t necessary as there  are a lot of restaurants in the area, Starbucks across the street and airport  is 10 minutes away.
 Riverside  Hotel
 620 E Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
 www.riversidehotel.com
 (954) 467-0671
 Fairfield  Inn & Suites, a Marriott Property
 30 S Federal Hwy, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
 https://www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/fllld-fairfield-inn-and-suites-fort-lauderdale-downtown-las-olas/?scid=bb1a189a-fec3-4d19-a255-54ba596febe2
 (954)  713-0400
 
 February  11 - 13Private - 1st Source Bank ALFP
 South Bend, Indiana
 
 February  25 -27Private  - Key Bank ALFP
 Denver, Colorado
 
 March 5 – 7Seattle,  Washington
 Financial  Pacific Leasing (open)
 3455  S 344th Way, Federal Way, WA 98001, USA
 
 April 23,  20208:00AM (CDT)
 End: Sat., April 25, 2020
 4:00PM (CDT_
 Location: Co-hosed by
 Arvest Bank and
 LTi Technology
 Solutions: Class
 Location: 9401 W
 135th St., Overland
 Park, KS (2nd
 Floor). Exam
 Location: 9300 W.
 110th St. Suite 270,
 Overland Park, KS
 6620
 Spaces Left: 6
 Register: 14 registrants
 
 Recommended  Hotels:
 Townplace Suites by Marriott
 7020 W. 133rd St.
 Overland Park, KS
 (913) 851-3100
 Holiday Inn Express
 7580 W 135th St.
 Overland Park, KS
 (913) 681-8400
 
 Hampton Inn and Suites
 7521 W. 135th Street
 Overland Park, KS
 (913) 681-6600
 
 MENTOR  PROGRAMThe Mentor Program was created to assist candidates in preparing to take the  CLFP Exam. The Program is voluntary and is offered at no additional cost to the  candidate.
 
 A candidate will  be assigned a Mentor upon request following formal application and receipt of  fee for the CLFP Exam. Candidates are matched with a mentor who is  knowledgeable in areas of the Body of Knowledge of interest to the candidate.  Or, the candidate may request a specific individual.All Mentors hold  the CLFP designation and will answer questions about the conduct of the exam,  assist the candidate in understanding and interpreting areas of the Body of  Knowledge, and generally provide intellectual, experiential and moral support.
 
 Mentors are not  instructors or tutors. The candidate is expected to learn the required material  on his or her own by studying written materials, by taking available industry  courses, and through industry work experience. Mentors will provide  clarification and interpretation for subjects the candidate has already  studied. For instance, the Mentor will clarify Present Value Theory, but will  not teach the Theory.
 About  Academyhttps://clfpfoundation.org/academy-for-lease-and-finance-professionals/
 Application:https://clfpfoundation.org/how-to-become-a-clfp/#Examination
      
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
  
  [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 
        Boxer/ChowChowLouisville, Kentucky
 
 DamonMale
 Large
 Color: Brown
 Neutered
 Site:
 Springhurst  Feeders Supply
 9485  Brownsboro Road
 402-425-5486
 Intake date:  10/31/2019
 Available
 Adoptions are  conveniently located within 7 Feeders Supply stores. Adoptions are open Monday  to Saturday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. I came to the  Kentucky Humane Society from another shelter. The staff are still learning all  about me. I miss being in a home and have a lot of love to give. Kentucky  Humane SocietyEast Campus
 (502)  272-1070
 1000 Lyndon  Lane, Suite B
 Louisville,  KY 40222
 Open Monday  through Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday  and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 Equipment Leasing Books  for ChristmasStill Time to Order
 
 http://leasingnews.org/Pages/leasing_books.html
 
        [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 

 News Briefs---- 
 Thousands of truck drivers have lost  their jobs in 2019 as the transportation 'bloodbath' unfolds.
 Here's  the list of the biggest bankrupt trucking companies.
 https://www.businessinsider.com/trucking-companies-bankrupt-list-truckers-react-to-industry-bloodbath-2019-7
 PMCC and Amtrak $93 Million DisputeStealing Parks from One Leased Train to...
 https://www.railwayage.com/financeleasing/justice-for-all/
 Cisco unveils plan for building  internet for the next decade of digital innovation
 https://www.iol.co.za/business-report/international/cisco-unveils-plan-for-building-internet-for-the-next-decade-of-digital-innovation-39207556
 How the Salvation Army is trying to  change its 'anti-LGBTQ' reputation
 https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/15/us/salvation-army-kettles-lgbtq-stance/index.html
    [headlines]
 --------------------------------------------------------------
  You May Have Missed---
 The Verge’s gadgets of the  decadeThe  100 gadgets that made a difference and defined the 2010s
 https://www.theverge.com/2019/12/10/20997215/best-gadgets-decade-2010s-list-roundup-apple-iphone-tesla-amazon-samsung
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
 A poem to the nationOakland Raider Blog
 
 As I look upon  our Oakland’s sideI wonder, where is the Raider pride,
 From David Car to  Jon GrudenI fear this team looks very lost,
 Our team has  stood the test of timebut can we beat the next in line,
 I fear the worst,  as we fallWe lack the excellence to conquer all,
 I read words of  anger, disappointment, and hateI wonder has this team sealed its fate,
 A nation divided  will never prevailAs we chase this AFC west trail,
 Have we lost all  hope and respectWhile teams take us as neglect,
 This silver  linning has faded to greyAs I look forward to another day,
 I say this team  will stay Silver and Blackas long as the nation doesn’t turn its back.
 Hello, Las  VegasGoodbye,  Oakland dear.
 
 Raider84 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
  
 49ers lose in  wild finish but end six-year playoff droughthttps://www.sfgate.com/sports/college/article/Packers-Bills-49ers-Seahawks-could-clinch-14908012.php
 Jaguars 20, Raiders 16: One last  dagger to the side for Oakland football fans
 https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/12/15/jaguars-20-raiders-16-one-last-dagger-to-the-side-for-oakland-football-fans/
 Black Sunday: Oakland’s diehard  Raiders fanssay one last goodbye before Vegas
 https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/12/13/black-sunday-oaklands-diehard-raiders-fans-say-one-last-goodbye-before-vegas/
 Video reveals Bengals security  confrontingPatriots over controversial taping
 https://nypost.com/2019/12/15/video-reveals-bengals-security-confronting-patriots-over-controversial-taping/
 Cowboys-Rams: Dallas finally beats a  winning team, and in commanding fashion
 https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/cowboys/2019/12/16/5-thoughts-from-cowboys-rams-dallas-finally-beats-a-winning-team-and-in-commanding-fashion/
 Madison Bumgarner, Diamondback agree to dealhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/giants/article/Reports-Bumgarner-near-deal-with-Diamondbacks-14908421.php
 Babe Ruth’s  500th HR bat sells for more than $1 million at auctionhttps://www.oregonlive.com/news/2019/12/babe-ruths-bat-sells-for-more-than-1-million-at-auction.html
 Serra suffers  painful ending in CIF final to Corona del Mar https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/12/14/serra-suffers-painful-ending-in-cif-final-to-corona-del-mar/
 
 [headlines]--------------------------------------------------------------
  California Nuts Briefs---
 
 What to expect as Kaiser’s 4,000  behavioral health workers launch 5-day strike statewide
 https://www.sacbee.com/news/local/health-and-medicine/article238378533.html?
 2019 was the  year of housing in San Josehttps://sanjosespotlight.com/2019-was-the-year-of-housing-in-san-jose/
 A land rush in Paradise? Investors  gobble up‘bargain’ properties in wake of Camp Fire
 https://www.sacbee.com/news/california/fires/article237962814.html?
 Hundreds more  scooters to zip down San Francisco streetshttps://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/Hundreds-more-scooters-to-zip-down-SF-streets-14905922.php
 
 [headlines]
 --------------------------------------------------------------
 
  
 “Gimme  that Wine”
 
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJnQoi8DSE8 Williams Selyem Founding WinemakerBurt Williams Dies at Age 79
 https://www.winespectator.com/articles/williams-selyem-founding-winemaker-burt-williams-dies-at-age-79?sfns=mo
 Margaux third growth Château Cantenac  Brown has been sold to Frenchman Tristan Le Lous for an  estimated €150 million.
 https://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/2019/12/cantenac-brown-sold-to-french-family/
 
 
 Free Wine Apphttps://www.nataliemaclean.com/mobileapp/
 
  Wine  Prices by vintagehttp://www.winezap.com
 http://www.wine-searcher.com/
  US/International  Wine Eventshttp://www.localwineevents.com/
  Leasing  News Wine & Spirits Pagehttp://two.leasingnews.org/Recommendations/wnensprts.htm
 [headlines]----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
        This Day in History      1773 - In the celebrated Boston Tea Party,  in a nonviolent political protest, the Sons of Liberty in Boston, dressed as  Indians, boarded three British ships in Boston harbor and threw their cargoes  of tea, 342 chests worth 18,000 British pounds into the water (initially  referred to by John Adams as "the Destruction of the Tea in Boston). The  action was the climax of growing colonial opposition to the growing set of  import taxes, including the “Tea Act.” As  Europeans developed a taste for tea in the 17th century, rival companies were  formed to import the product from China. In England, Parliament gave the East  India Company a monopoly on the importation of tea in 1698. When tea became  popular in the British colonies, Parliament sought to eliminate foreign competition  by passing an act in 1721 that required colonists to import their tea only from  Great Britain. The East India Company did not export tea to the colonies; by  law, the company was required to sell its tea wholesale at auctions in England.  British firms bought this tea and exported it to the colonies, where they  resold it to merchants in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston. Until  1767, the East India Company paid an ad valorem tax of about 25% on tea that it  imported into Great Britain. Parliament laid additional taxes on tea sold for  consumption in Britain. These high taxes, combined with the fact that tea  imported into Holland was not taxed by the Dutch government, meant that Britons  and British Americans could buy smuggled Dutch tea at much cheaper prices. The  biggest market for illicit tea was England.  By the 1760s, the East India  Company was losing £400,000 per year to smugglers in Great Britain, but Dutch  tea was also smuggled into British America in significant quantities. In 1767,  to help the East India Company compete with smuggled Dutch tea, Parliament  passed the Indemnity Act, which lowered the tax on tea consumed in Great  Britain, and gave the East India Company a refund of the 25% duty on tea that  was re-exported to the colonies. To help offset this loss of government  revenue, Parliament also passed the Townshend Revenue Act of 1767, which levied  new taxes, including one on tea, in the colonies. Instead of solving the  smuggling problem, however, the Townshend duties renewed a controversy about  Parliament's right to tax the colonies.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Tea_Party
 1811 - The first of the powerful New Madrid, MO  earthquakes, with an estimated magnitude of 7.7, struck the central Mississippi  Valley.
 1826 - Benjamin Edwards rode into Mexican-controlled  Nacogdoches, TX and declared himself ruler of the Republic of Fredonia.   The Fredonian Rebellion (December, 1826–January, 1827) was the first attempt by  Anglo settlers in Texas to secede from Mexico.
 1828 – Birthday of John Beatty (d.  1914), Sandusky, OH.  Brigadier-General (Union volunteers).
 http://www.picturehistory.com/find/p/6734/mcms.html
 http://famousamericans.net/johnbeatty1/
 1863 - Confederate President Jefferson Davis  names General Joseph Johnston commander of the Army of Tennessee. Johnston  replaced Braxton Bragg, who managed to lose all of Tennessee to the Union  during that year. He fought at the First Battle of Bull Run and commanded the  Army of Northern Virginia during the early stages of the Peninsular Campaign in  1862. When he was wounded at the Battle of Seven Pines on May 31, Lee replaced  Johnston. After recovering from his wounds, Johnston was sent to coordinate the  operations of the armies the Tennessee and Mississippi regions. Since he did  not have a command of his own, Johnston resented this duty. In 1863, Johnston  made a futile attempt to relieve John C. Pemberton's army at Vicksburg. He  wanted Pemberton to fight his way out of Vicksburg, but Union General Ulysses  S. Grant had Pemberton trapped. The surrender of Pemberton's army put  additional stress on the already strained relationship between Johnston and  President Davis. After the campaigns of 1863, however, Davis felt he had little  choice but to name Johnston commander of the Army of Tennessee. The  Confederates were losing large sections of territory to the Union. Bragg was  literally maneuvered right out of Tennessee during the summer, although he  engineered a victory at Chickamauga before laying siege to Union troops at Chattanooga.  When Grant broke the Confederate hold on Chattanooga in November, Bragg  resigned his command. Davis reluctantly appointed Johnston to save the  situation in the West. Johnston took the field with his army in the spring of  1864, when Union General William T. Sherman began his drive toward Atlanta.  Johnston employed a defensive strategy that avoided direct battle with Sherman  but which also resulted in lost territory as Johnston slowly backed up to  Atlanta. Johnston's command lasted until July 1864, when Davis replaced  Johnston after the Army of the Tennessee was backed into Atlanta. Ironically,  the Union Army considered him one of the best leaders of the Confederate  troops, as he was quite effective. Jefferson Davis did not see it that way.
 http://tennessee-scv.org/camp28/johnstonbio.html
 http://www.swcivilwar.com/jjohnston.html
 1863 - Birthday of George Santayana (d. 1952),  Philosopher and author, Madrid, Spain. At the age of nine, he immigrated to the  US where he attended and later taught at Harvard University. In 1912, he  returned to Europe and traveled extensively. It was Santayana who said, “Those  who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
 1864 - Union troops defeated Confederate forces on the  second day of battle at Nashville, essentially knocking the Confederate Army of  Tennessee out of the Civil War. Union General George Thomas attack on the army  of Confederate General John Bell Hood at Nashville was a major defeat for the  Confederacy. Hood's drastically outnumbered forces retreated, and only some  heroic rear-guard action prevented the total destruction of the Confederate  army.
 http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/dec16.html
 1867 - Elizabeth Johnson Harris (d. 1942) birthday,  one of the first African-American female writers.
 http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/harris/#sarah
 http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/collections/african-american-women.html
 1869 - Decree by US Emperor Norton I,  historically America's greatest and most enlightened ruler, demands that  Sacramento clean its muddy streets and place gaslights on streets leading to  the capitol.
 http://www.zpub.com/sf/history/nort.html
 http://www.sfmuseum.org/hist1/norton.html
 1870 - Negro Methodist Episcopal Church founded  in Jackson, TN. Its name was changed in 1954 to the Christian Methodist  Episcopal Church. The denomination today is comprised of approximately 3,000  congregations.
 1884 - William Henry Fruen of Minneapolis received a patent  for a vending machine that dispensed liquid automatically. When a coin was  inserted in the slot, a uniform supply of liquid was released from a reservoir.
 1889 - The Players League formally organized with Colonel  E.A. McAlpin of New York as president. The league prohibited player transfers  without the player's consent, excess profits will be split between the  capitalists and the players, and prize money will be awarded to the teams in  the order of their finish.
 1893 - Anton Dvorak's “New World Symphony” premiered at the  newly erected Carnegie Hall with the New York Philharmonic playing. The  composer attended and enjoyed enthusiastic applause from the audience. The  symphony contains snatches from black spirituals and American folk music.  Dvorak, a Bohemian, had been in the US only a year when he composed it as a  greeting to his friends in Europe.
 1901 - The famous story, "Peter Rabbit," by  Beatrix Potter, was printed for the first time, complete with Potter's  watercolor illustrations. Ms. Potter had come up with the Peter Rabbit concept  eight years earlier when she sent a story, told in pen and ink drawings, to a  five-year-old who was sick in bed. The first story about the ill-behaved rabbit  was meant to cheer up the little boy. Of course, all good little boys and girls  remember that Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cotton-tail were the good little bunnies who went  down the lane to gather blackberries. But Peter, who was very naughty, ran  straight to Mr. McGregor's garden, and squeezed through the gate. First he ate  some lettuce and some French beans; and then he ate some radishes ... and he got  too fat ... and Mr. McGregor is coming ... and we gotta get out of this garden  ... and it's getting late ... we will have to finish this later.
 1901 - Margaret Mead (d. 1978) birthday, Philadelphia.   U.S. anthropologist who revolutionized thinking about primitive life and female  adolescent sexuality by raising questions about the assumptions of rigid social  mores in all cultures. In 1949, she published “Male and Female: A Study of the  Sexes in a Changing World” which contrasted gender roles in various societies,  the importance of the mother in the development of the children's adult lives,  and the different opinions on women's roles in raising children. It examined  traditional male-female relationships, using observations from the Pacific and  the East Indies for reference in discussing such topics as the mother's  influence in perpetuating male and female roles and the different concepts of  women's roles in marriage.
 http://mead2001.org/index.html
 http://www.mead2001.org/Biography.htm
 1905 - Sime Silverman published the first issue of  "Variety," the weekly show biz magazine. The first issue was 16 pages  in length and sold for a nickel. "Variety" and "Daily  Variety" are still going strong and have become the industry standard.
 1907 - The American Great White Fleet began its  circumnavigation of the world.  The popular nickname for the US Navy  battle fleet that completed the circumnavigation of the globe from December 16,  1907, to February 22, 1909, by order of President Theodore Roosevelt, it consisted  of 16 battleships, divided into two squadrons, along with various  escorts.  Roosevelt sought to demonstrate growing American military power  and blue-water navy capability. Hoping to enforce treaties and protect overseas  holdings, the U.S. Congress appropriated funds to build American sea power.  Beginning with just 90 small ships, over one-third of them wooden, the navy  quickly grew to include new modern steel fighting vessels. The hulls of these  ships were painted a stark white, giving the armada the nickname "Great  White Fleet."
 1907 - Eugene H. Farrar became the first singer to broadcast  on radio. He sang from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York. The song? "Do  You Really Want to Hurt Me?"
 1915 - Birthday of trombonist Turk Murphy (d. 1987), Palermo,  CA.
 http://www.sfmuseum.org/bio/turk.html
 http://www.sftradjazz.org/collection.html
 http://www.jazzbymail.com/artists/tmjb.html
 http://www.sftradjazz.org/photos.html
 http://www.sftradjazz.org/92.html
 http://www.ragtimebymail.com/albums_mmr/mmr11.html
 http://www.jazzbymail.com/albums_mmr/mmr09.html
 http://www.stompoff.com/albums1000/1027.html
 (I have in my shellac collection, the first record he made with Lu  Watters, too. I saw him many, many times in San Francisco at his own club and  the Fairmont. Tony Bennett was a big Dixieland fan and was often there. Turk  Murphy began playing in “Frisco” (the word used in several of the tunes he  wrote, although today considered a “no-no”) dance bands as early as 1930. In  1939, he teamed with the legendary Lu Watters, joining Waters' Yerba Buena Jazz  Band which began a steady engagement at the Dawn Club in the basement of the  Monadnock Building on Market between Third & Annie Streets. In 1960, he  opened his first “Earthquake McGoon's” on Broadway, named for the then-popular  Al Capp cartoon character.
 1916 - Writer Theodore Weiss (d.  2003) born Reading, Pa.
 http://www.princeton.edu/pr/news/03/q2/0418-weiss.htm
 1917 - Birthday of A.C. Clarke (d. 2008), Minehead, UK.  Sorry to break the tradition of American History, but being a science-fiction  buff, he is one of my favorite writers, so he is now an adopted American. Yes,  I am a “Trekkie,” too. I have all the badges on my office wall, plus many Star  Trek items on my bookcase. Also a Western fan. At age 14, I wrote four western  paperbacks that were published (I made $40 each).
 http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/aclarke.htm
 1917 - An ice jam closed the Ohio River between Warsaw, KY,  and Rising Sun, IN. The thirty-foot-high ice jam held for 58 days, and backed  up the river a distance of 100 miles.
 1922 – EDWARDS, WALTER ATLEE, MEDAL of HONOR
 Rank and organization: Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Navy. Place and date: Sea of  Marmora, Turkey, 16 December 1922. Born: 8 November 1886, Philadelphia, Pa.  Accredited to: Pennsylvania. G.O. No.: 123, 4 February 1924. (Medal presented  by President Coolidge at the White House on 2 February 1924.) Other Navy award:  Navy Cross. Citation: For heroism in rescuing 482 men, women and children from  the French military transport Vinh-Long, destroyed by fire in the Sea of  Marmora, Turkey, on 16 December 1922. Lt. Comdr. Edwards, commanding the U.S.S.  Bainbridge, placed his vessel alongside the bow of the transport and, in spite  of several violent explosions which occurred on the burning vessel, maintained  his ship in that position until all who were alive were taken on board. Of a  total of 495 on board, 482 were rescued by his coolness, judgment and  professional skill, which were combined with a degree of heroism that must  reflect new glory on the U.S. Navy.
 1928 - Science-fiction great Philip K. Dick (d. 1982) was  born Chicago, Illinois. American science fiction writer par excellence. Author  of “Flow My Tears the Policeman Said,” ”Crack in Space,” “Man in the High  Castle,” “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?,” “Time Out of Joint,” etc.
 http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/pkdick.htm
 1930 - Birthday of flute player Sam Most (d.  2013), Atlantic City, NJ
 http://home.earthlink.net/~wigwise/sammost.html
 http://home.earthlink.net/~wigwise/index.htm
 1930 - Golfer Bobby Jones won the first James E. Sullivan  award as the nation's best amateur athlete. The award was established by the  Amateur Athletic Union to honor its former president and is presented annually  to the athlete who “by his or her performance, example, and influence as an  amateur, has done the most during the year to advance the course of  sportsmanship.”
 1933 - Birthday of organ player Johnny “Hammond” Smith (d.  1997), Louisville, KY.
 http://www.artistdirect.com/music/artist/bio/0,,543346,00.html?artist=
 Johnny+%22Hammond%22+Smith
 1937 – The first escape from Alcatraz, San  Francisco.  Theodore Cole and Ralph Roe filed through iron bars in the  prison's mat shop in the industries building and escaped on a very foggy day,  preventing them from being spotted by guards in the watch towers. The two  jumped into the water and were never seen again, but the severe weather  conditions at the time have led to a consensus that they drowned in the bay and  their bodies were swept out to sea by the strong current in San Francisco Bay.
 http://zpub.com/sf50/alcatraz/
 1940 - Bob Crosby and his Bobcats backed up brother Bing as  "San Antonio Rose" was recorded on Decca Records.
 1941 - The first submarine from the United States to sink a  Japanese ship in World War II was the USS Swordfish, commanded by Lt. Chester  Carl Smith, which torpedoed the 8,662-ton Japanese freighter Atsutusan Maur  under destroyer escort off the coast of Indochina. The Swordfish was 311 feet  long and displaced 2,350 tons. The Ship was destroyed by a mine on its 13th  patrol in January, 1945, near Okinawa, with the loss of all aboard.
 1944 - German V-2 strikes Antwerp bioscope (638 killed)
 http://www.nasm.si.edu/galleries/gal114/SpaceRace/sec200img/213l3p3.jpg
 http://www.hrw.com/science/si-science/earth/spacetravel/spacerace/
 SpaceRace/sec200/sec210.html
 http://www.nasm.si.edu/galleries/gal114/SpaceRace/sec200/sec211.htm
 1944 - US 2nd Infantry division occupies "Heartbreak  Crossroads" at a vital crossroads near a cabin named Wehlerscheid, north  of Krinkelt-Rocherath, Belgium. In early December, the U.S. V Corps trucked the  Division from positions it had held in the south to Krinkelt-Rocherath, twin  villages adjacent to Elsenborn Ridge and near the southern tip of the Battle of  Hurtgen Forest. http://ranger95.crosswinds.net/divisions/99th_elsenborn_ridge.html
 1944 - Birthday of guitarist John Abercrombie, Port Chester,  NY.
 http://www.ejn.it/mus/abercrom.htm
 http://www.johnabercrombie.com/
 http://www.guitarspecialist.com/johnabercrombie.htm
 1944 - Battle of the Bulge: A German offensive  was launched in the Belgian Ardennes forest, where Hitler had managed to  concentrate 250,000 men. The Nazi commanders, hoping to minimize any aerial  counterattack by the Allies, chose a time when foggy, rainy weather prevailed.  The initial attack by eight armored divisions along a 75-mile front took the  Allies by surprise and the 5th Panzer Army penetrated to within 20 miles of  crossings on the Meuse River. US troops were able to hold fast at bottlenecks  in the Ardennes, but by the end of December, the German push had penetrated 65  miles into the Allied lines (though their line had narrowed from the initial 75  miles to 20 miles). By that time, the Allies began to respond and the Germans  were stopped by Montgomery on the Meuse and by Patton at Bastogne. The weather  then cleared and Allied aircraft began to bomb the German forces and supply  lines by December 26. The Allies reestablished their original line by January  21.
 1944 - McGARlTY, VERNON, Medal of Honor
 Rank and organization: Technical Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company L, 393d Infantry,  99th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Krinkelt, Belgium, 16 December  1944. Entered service at: Model, Tenn. Born: 1 December 1921, Right, Tenn. G.O.  No.: 6, 11 January 1946. Citation: He was painfully wounded in an artillery  barrage that preceded the powerful counteroffensive launched by the Germans  near Krinkelt, Belgium, on the morning of 16 December 1944. He made his way to  an aid station, received treatment, and then refused to be evacuated, choosing  to return to his hard-pressed men instead. The fury of the enemy's great  Western Front offensive swirled about the position held by T/Sgt. McGarity's  small force, but so tenaciously did these men fight on orders to stand firm at  all costs that they could not be dislodged despite murderous enemy fire and the  breakdown of their communications. During the day the heroic squad leader  rescued 1 of his friends who had been wounded in a forward position, and  throughout the night he exhorted his comrades to repulse the enemy's attempts  at infiltration. When morning came and the Germans attacked with tanks and  infantry, he braved heavy fire to run to an advantageous position where he  immobilized the enemy's lead tank with a round from a rocket launcher. Fire  from his squad drove the attacking infantrymen back, and 3 supporting tanks  withdrew. He rescued, under heavy fire, another wounded American, and then  directed devastating fire on a light cannon which had been brought up by the  hostile troops to clear resistance from the area. When ammunition began to run  low, T/Sgt. McGarity, remembering an old ammunition hole about 100 yards  distant in the general direction of the enemy, braved a concentration of hostile  fire to replenish his unit's supply. By circuitous route the enemy managed to  emplace a machinegun to the rear and flank of the squad's position, cutting off  the only escape route. Without hesitation, the gallant soldier took it upon  himself to destroy this menace single-handedly. He left cover, and while under  steady fire from the enemy, killed or wounded all the hostile gunners with  deadly accurate rifle fire and prevented all attempts to re-man the gun. Only  when the squad's last round had been fired was the enemy able to advance and  capture the intrepid leader and his men. The extraordinary bravery and extreme  devotion to duty of T/Sgt. McGarity supported a remarkable delaying action  which provided the time necessary for assembling reserves and forming a line  against which the German striking power was shattered.
 1945 - MURRAY, CHARLES P., JR., Medal of Honor
 Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Company C, 30th Infantry,  3d Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Kaysersberg, France, 16 December  1944. Entered service at: Wilmington, N.C. Birth: Baltimore, Md. G.O. No.: 63,  1 August 1945. Citation: For commanding Company C, 30th Infantry, displaying  supreme courage and heroic initiative near Kaysersberg, France, on 16 December  1944, while leading a reinforced platoon into enemy territory. Descending into  a valley beneath hilltop positions held by our troops, he observed a force of  200 Germans pouring deadly mortar, bazooka, machinegun, and small arms fire  into an American battalion occupying the crest of the ridge. The enemy's  position in a sunken road, though hidden from the ridge, was open to a flank  attack by 1st Lt. Murray's patrol but he hesitated to commit so small a force  to battle with the superior and strongly disposed enemy. Crawling out ahead of  his troops to a vantage point, he called by radio for artillery fire. His  shells bracketed the German force, but when he was about to correct the range  his radio went dead. He returned to his patrol, secured grenades and a rifle to  launch them and went back to his self-appointed outpost. His first shots  disclosed his position; the enemy directed heavy fire against him as he  methodically fired his missiles into the narrow defile. Again he returned to  his patrol. With an automatic rifle and ammunition, he once more moved to his  exposed position. Burst after burst he fired into the enemy, killing 20,  wounding many others, and completely disorganizing its ranks, which began to  withdraw. He prevented the removal of 3 German mortars by knocking out a truck.  By that time a mortar had been brought to his support. 1st Lt. Murray directed  fire of this weapon, causing further casualties and confusion in the German  ranks. Calling on his patrol to follow, he then moved out toward his original  objective, possession of a bridge and construction of a roadblock. He captured  10 Germans in foxholes. An eleventh, while pretending to surrender, threw a  grenade which knocked him to the ground, inflicting 8 wounds. Though suffering  and bleeding profusely, he refused to return to the rear until he had chosen  the spot for the block and had seen his men correctly deployed. By his  single-handed attack on an overwhelming force and by his intrepid and heroic  fighting, 1st Lt. Murray stopped a counterattack, established an advance  position against formidable odds, and provided an inspiring example for the men  of his command.
 1945 - Prince Fumimaro Konoe, twice Japanese prime minister,  committed suicide rather than face war crimes charges. In the 1920s, he had  worked to curb army powers and prevent an expansion of the war with China. He  helped engineer the fall of the Tojo government in 1944 but was suspected of  war atrocities.
 1945 - Top Hits
 “It Might as Well Be Spring” - The Sammy Kaye Orchestra (vocal: Billy Williams)
 “White Christmas” - Bing Crosby
 “It's Been a Long, Long Time” - The Harry James Orchestra (vocal: Kitty Kallen)
 “Silver Dew on the Blue Grass Tonight” - Bob Wills
 1947 – William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Brattain  built the first practical point-contact transistor.  Shortly after the end  of the war in 1945, AT&T’s Bell Labs formed a solid state physics group,  led by Shockley and chemist Stanley Morgan, which included Bardeen and  Brattain. Their assignment was to seek a solid-state alternative to fragile  glass vacuum tube amplifiers as an internal improvement for the Bell System  which was growing the nationwide telephone system at the time.
 1950 - Patti Page's "The Tennessee Waltz" hits #1
 1950 – President Harry Truman declared a state of emergency  after Chinese troops enter the fight in support of communist North Korea.
 1951 - In a special preview courtesy of "Chesterfield  Sound Off Time," "Dragnet" made  it to television. The police drama opened its official run on television January  3, 1952. Trivia fact: Sergeant Friday's boss in the preview was played by  Raymond Burr. My father, Lawrence Menkin, wrote several of the episodes of the  early editions. They were based primarily on true episodes, including actual  police who consulted on and off the set for authenticity. It starred Jack Webb  as stoic and determined Sergeant Joe Friday, a man whose life was his  investigative work, and who was recognized by his recurring line, “Just the  facts, ma'am.”  My father said he was “almost everything” in the series  from producer to story editor, a workaholic, very hard to deal with, and one of  the reasons he was able to sell him scripts. He made many Los Angeles police  friends, meaning the guys on the street, not from the PR department, and  brought them along to “pitch stories”. Friday had partners, Barton Yarborough  played Sergeant Ben Romero for three episodes. For the rest of the season,  Barney Phillips played Sergeant Ed Jacobs and Ben Alexander played his comedic  sidekick, Officer Frank Smith. A new version appeared in 1967 with Webb and his  new partner, Officer Bill Gannon (Harry Morgan, the father of my very good high  school friend). “Dragnet” is also known for its theme music and its narrative  epilogue describing the fate of the bad guys. (Here's a side note, my father  was driving a 1951 two door brown Pontiac. One day leaving the studio, he got  in, said he had a hard time turning the key, but it worked, and when he got  home, he didn't have the scripts in the car. He then discovered it was not his  car. So he drove to the station where he knew some policemen, and they all had  a big laugh, got his car back, and they used the story in one of the episodes  but it was Friday's sergeant, I believe, who started the wrong car.
 1952 - Buck Clayton All-Star group  jams, Hucklebuck, Robbins' Nest, Christopher Columbus, NYC, on Columbia label.
 1953 - Top Hits
 “Rags to Riches” - Tony Bennett
 “White Christmas” - Bing Crosby
 “Ricochet” - Teresa Brewer
 “Caribbean” - Mitchell Torok
 1954 - Willie Mays becomes the first  player to win the Most Valuable Player Award in his first full year in the Majors  when he easily outdistances Reds first baseman Ted Kluszewski for the honor.  The 23-year-old Giants center fielder made his big league debut at the end of  May in 1951, but missed the last two seasons due to his military service in the  U.S. Army.
 1956 - Elvis Presley leaves the Louisiana Hayride after 50  appearances on the radio show. Broadcast from KWKH in Shreveport, LA, the  weekly broadcast made country music stars of several unknowns.
 1960 - A United DC-8 and a TWA Super Constellation collided  over Staten Island in NY and crashed, killing all 128 people aboard both  aircraft and 6 more on the ground.
 1960 - Lucille Ball took a respite from  her weekly TV series to star in the Broadway production of "Wildcat",  which opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York City. The show ran for 171  performances.
 1961 - Top Hits
 “Please Mr. Postman” - The Marvelettes
 “The Twist” - Chubby Checker
 “Walk on By” - Leroy Van Dyke
 “Big Bad John” - Jimmy Dean
 1961 - Martin Luther King, Jr. and  266 others were arrested in Albany, GA. Considered a major turning point in  history, as evidenced by his own words in his autobiography: “On December 16,  1961, the Negro community of that city made its stride toward freedom. Citizens  from every quarter of the community made their moral witness against the system  of segregation. They willingly went to jail to create an effective protest. “I  too was jailed on charges of parading without a permit, disturbing the peace,  and obstructing the sidewalk. I refused to pay the fine and had expected to  spend Christmas in jail. I hoped thousands would join me. I didn't come to be  arrested. I had planned to stay a day or so and return home after giving  counsel. But after seeing negotiations break down, I knew I had to stay. My  personal reason for being in Albany was to express a personal witness of a  situation I felt was very important to me. As I, accompanied by over one  hundred spirited Negroes, voluntarily chose jail to bail, the city officials  appeared so hardened to all appeals to conscience that the confidence of some  of our supporters was shaken. They nervously counted heads and concluded too  hastily that the movement was losing momentum. “I shall never forget the  experience of seeing women over seventy, teenagers, and middle-aged adults-some  with professional degrees in medicine, law, and education, some simple  housekeepers and laborers-crowding the cells. This development was an indication  that the Negro would not rest until all the barriers of segregation were broken  down. The South had to decide whether it would comply with the law of the land  or drift into chaos and social stagnation. “One must search for words in an  attempt to describe the spirit of enthusiasm and majesty engendered in the next  mass meeting, on that night when seven hundred Negro citizens were finally  released from prison. Out from the jails came those men and women doctors,  ministers, housewives-all of whom had joined ranks with a gallant student  leadership in an exemplary demonstration of nonviolent resistance to  segregation. “Before long the merchants were urging a settlement upon the city  officials and an agreement was finally wrung from their unwilling hands. That agreement  was dishonored and violated by the city.” It was inevitable that the sweep of  events would see a resumption of the nonviolent movement, and when cases  against the seven hundred odd prisoners were not dropped and when the city  council refused to negotiate to end discrimination in public places, actions  began again.
 http://www.stanford.edu/group/king/publications/autobiography/chp_16.htm
 http://pbsvideodb.pbs.org/chapter.asp?item_id=7897&chap_id=2ed
 in Albany, Georgia.
 1962 - Birthday of William “The Refrigerator”  Perry, former football player, born Aiken, SC
 1962 - Only one man ever succeeded in swimming all the way  to shore from Alcatraz.  John Paul Scott washed up on the rocks at Fort  Point. He was so tired from the swim through the frigid waters of the Golden  Gate that the boys who found him thought he was an unsuccessful suicide attempt  from the overhanging Golden Gate Bridge and called for help. Police apprehended  the exhausted swimmer within minutes of his landfall.
 1965 - Gen. William Westmoreland, Commander of U.S. Military  Assistance Command Vietnam, sends a request for more troops. With nearly  200,000 U.S. military personnel in South Vietnam already, Westmoreland sent  Defense Secretary Robert McNamara a message stating that he would need an  additional 243,000 men by the end of 1966. Although the high tide of U.S. troop  strength in South Vietnam never reached the 600,000, there were more than  540,000 U.S. troops in South Vietnam by 1969.
 1967 - Wilt Chamberlain of NBA Philadelphia 76ers scores 68  points vs Chicago.
 1969 - Top Hits
 “Leaving on a Jet Plane” - Peter, Paul & Mary
 “Someday We'll Be Together” - Diana Ross & The Supremes
 “Down on the Corner/Fortunate Son” - Creedence Clearwater Revival
 “(I'm So) Afraid of Losing You Again” - Charley Pride
 1970 - Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Down On The  Corner,” "Lookin' Out My Back Door,” "Travelin' Band,” "Bad Moon  Rising,” "Up Around The Bend,” as well as the LPs “Cosmo's Factory,”  “Willy And The Poor Boys,” “Green River,” “Bayou Country,” and “Creedence  Clearwater Revival,” are all certified gold.
 1971 - Melanie (Safka) earned a gold record for her single,  "Brand New Key," about roller skates and love. It hit #1 on Christmas  Day, 1971.
 1971 - Don McLean's eight-minute-plus (8:32) version of  "American Pie" was released. It became one of the longest songs with  some of the most confusing (pick your favorite interpretation) lyrics to ever  hit the pop charts. Disc Jockeys also liked the song because it allowed them  time for “potty breaks” from the microphone. "American Pie" hit #1 on  January 15, 1972.  However open to  interpretation the lyrics may have been, the song's emotional resonance was  unmistakable: McLean was clearly relating a defining moment in the American  experience—something had been lost, and we knew it. Opening with the death of  singer Buddy Holly and ending near the tragic concert at Altamont Motor  Speedway, we are able to frame the span of years the song is covering—1959 to  1970—as the "10 years we've been on our own" of the third verse. It  is across this decade that the American cultural landscape changed radically,  passing from the relative optimism and conformity of the 1950s and early 1960s  to the rejection of these values by the various political and social movements  of the mid and late 1960s.
 1972 - Billy Paul's "Me and Mrs. Jones" hits #1
 1972 - The Miami Dolphins became the first NFL team to go  unbeaten and untied in an NFL regular season, then 14-games. The Dolphins beat  the Baltimore Colts to earn the honor. Larry King, incidentally, did color for  the Dolphins this year on radio.
 1972 - Paul McCartney's single, "Hi, Hi, Hi", was  released. It peaked at #10 on the top tune tabulation (February 3, 1973).
 1973 - Buffalo's O.J. Simpson runs for 200 yards against the  New York Jets, becoming the first person to top 2,000 yards rushing in an NFL  season (2,003).
 1974 - Arbitrator Peter Seitz declared A's ace, Catfish  Hunter, to be a free agent as a result of A's owner, Charles Finley, failing to  make insurance premium payments on Hunter's behalf, as stipulated in the  player's contract. This led to a bidding war among MLB owners, won by the  Yankees. Hunter went on to become a Hall of Famer.
 1975 - “One Day at a Time” premiered on TV. This sitcom  about a divorced mother raising two girls in Indianapolis starred Bonnie  Franklin as Ann Romano, Mackenzie Phillips and Valerie Bertinelli as daughters  Julie and Barbara Cooper. Other regulars included Pat Harrington, J., as  snarky, tool-belt-wearing maintenance man Dwayne Schneider, Richard Masur as  David Kane, Ann's boyfriend, Mary Louise Wilson as neighbor Ginny Wroblicki,  John Hillerman and Charles Siebert as Ann's bosses, John Putch as Barbara's  boyfriend and Nanette Fabray as Ann's mother. During the course of the series,  all three female leads got married and Ann opened her own ad agency.
 1975 - The Bay City Rollers earn a Gold record for their  first US single, "Saturday Night." They will go on to have five more  Billboard Top 40 hits.
 1976 - Andrew Young named Ambassador and Chief US Delegate  to the United Nations. He resigns his congressional seat on January 29, 1977 to  take the position.
 http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=Y000028
 http://search.eb.com/blackhistory/micro/650/54.html
 http://www.manchester.edu/Academic/Programs/departments/econ/files/
 museum/black/andrew.htm
 http://teacherlink.ed.usu.edu/tlresources/units/Byrnes
 famous/andrewyo.html
 1977 - Top Hits
 “You Light Up My Life” - Debby Boone
 “How Deep is Your Love” - Bee Gees
 “Blue Bayou” - Linda Ronstadt
 “Here You Come Again” - Dolly Parton
 1977 - The Bee Gees' "How Deep Is Your Love" is  certified gold
 1978 - Cleveland, Ohio, became the first city in the  post-Depression era to default on its loans. Plagued by political sniping  between its mayor and city council, as well as an eroding economic base,  Cleveland managed to pile up $14 million in debt to a number of local banks.
 1981 - Ray Charles is awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk  of Fame at 6777 Hollywood Blvd.
 1982 - Operating capacity of factories plummets. Heading in  to the 1980s, America's economy was hardly in the best shape. Indeed, years of  mounting debt and rising inflation had taken their toll on the nation's fiscal  health. Alas, the first few years of the '80s provided little change, as the  economy did not take well to Reaganomics, President Ronald Reagan's strategy of  tax cuts and spending hikes. And, throughout 1982, the government released a  stream of financial statistics that suggested that the situation was only  growing worse. In July, the Census Bureau announced that the poverty rate had  risen to 14 percent, which marked a rapid-fire 7.4-percent increase over its  mark in 1980. That same November, the Labor Department revealed that the cost  of living had suffered a 6-percent increase during the past twelve months. And,  on December 16, the Federal Reserve released a report indicating that the  operating capacity of U.S. factories had plummeted to 67.8 percent, the nation's  lowest mark since the indicator was introduced in 1948.
 1983 - Replacing Billy Martin (91-71, third place), Yogi  Berra is hired for the second time to manage the Yankees. The Hall of Famer's  self-exile from Yankee Stadium will last for nearly 15 seasons, after he is  dismissed 16 games into the 1985 season despite receiving assurances from owner  George Steinbrenner that he would not be fired. Steinbrenner chose to deliver  the message to the Yankee great through Clyde King rather than doing so in person,  the singular reason Yogi stated he would stay away from the beloved ballpark.  They reunited in 1999 and remained good  friends until Steinbrenner’s death in 2010.
 1985 – Mobsters Paul Castellano and Thomas Bilotti were shot  dead in front of Sparks Steak House in Manhattan on the orders of John Gotti,  who assumed leadership of New York's Gambino crime family.
 1985 - Top Hits
 “Broken Wings” - Mr. Mister
 “Say You, Say Me” - Lionel Richie
 “Party All the Time” - Eddie Murphy
 “Nobody Falls Like a Fool” - Earl Thomas Conley
 1987 - A Pacific storm battered the coast of California with  rain and high winds, and dumped heavy snow on the mountains of California.  Winds along the coast gusted to 70 mph at Point Arguello, and winds in the  Tehachapi Mountains of southern California gusted to 100 mph at Wheeler Ridge.  Snowfall totals ranged up to 24 inches at Mammoth Mountain. Snow fell for two  minutes at Malibu Beach, and Disneyland was closed due to the weather for only  the second time in twenty-four years. A winter storm which began in the  Southern Rockies four days earlier finished its course producing snow and high  winds in New England. Snowfall totals ranged up to 19 inches at Blanchard, ME.
 1989 - Fifty-seven cities from the Southern and Central  Plains to the Appalachians reported record low temperatures for the date,  including North Platte, NE with a reading of 17 degrees below zero. Squalls in  the Great Lakes Region produced 18 inches of snow at Syracuse, NY, and 30  inches at Carlisle, IND. Low pressure brought heavy snow to northern New  England, with 18 inches reported at Derby, Vermont and Saint Johnsbury,  Vermont.
 1992 - IBM said it would make its first layoffs in fifty  years. The company announced it would trim its staff by 25,000 employees and  dispose of some of the assets of its mainframe business. IBM had long been the  leading maker of mainframe computers, but in the late 1990s, demand declined as  personal computers became increasingly powerful.  IBM eventually sold its PC business to  Lenovo, a Chinese company.
 1993 - Woman-harassing Senator Robert  Packwood (R-OR) finally surrenders his diaries to a judge who turned them over  to the Senate Ethics Committee. Some of the tapes had been altered. Women's  groups had argued for years that Packwood should be brought up on charges of  sexual harassment. According to information released to the press, Packwood had  a long history of groping women, forcing himself on them using his political  power, and in general being a leech. He would eventually resign from the  Senate.
 http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cas22.htm
 1995 - The Beatles' "Free As A Bird"  peaks at number 2 on the UK charts and number 6 in the US. Written by John  Lennon and performed by him on piano as a rough demo shortly before he was  murdered, the track was completed by the remaining Beatles at Paul McCartney's  home studio.1995-The Beatles' "Free as a Bird" peaks at number 2 on  the UK charts and number 6 in the US. Written by John Lennon and performed by  him on piano as a rough demo shortly before he was murdered, the track was  completed by the remaining Beatles at Paul McCartney's home studio.
 1998 - Hundreds of missiles were fired on Iraq in response  to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's refusal to comply with the mission of United  Nations weapons inspectors.
 2000 - An F4 tornado hits communities near Tuscaloosa, AL,  killing 11 people and injuring 125 others. It was the strongest December  tornado in Alabama since 1950.
 2002 - After being invited to the Dominican Republic by  President Hipolito Mejia, Japanese home run king Sadaharu Oh meets one his  favorite players, island resident Sammy Sosa. The Dominican outfielder, who is  one homer shy of the coveted 500, will have to hit several hundred more to  reach the mark of 868 set by the 62-year old during his 22 seasons playing for  the Yomiuri Giants.
 2002 – DH David Ortiz was released by the Minnesota Twins.  The unheralded player will soon be picked up by the Red Sox, for whom he will  develop as one of the most accomplished sluggers in the game.  He retired  after the 2016 season, having hit 541 HRs, was a big part of the Sox’ World  Series championships in 2004, 2007 and 2013, and is likely to be the first DH  to enter the Hall of Fame.
 2010 - Paul McCartney paid tribute to his Beatles band mate  John Lennon during an appearance on Saturday Night Live where he performed  "A Day in the Life" and then thrilled viewers with a cover version of  his late friend's anti-war anthem "Give Peace a Chance."
 2011 - A federal judge sentences former Giants' super-star  Barry Bonds to 30 days of house arrest, 2 years of probation, 250 hours of  community service, and a $4,000 fine. The all-time home run champion, who is  appealing his guilty verdict for the obstruction of justice, could have faced  15 months of jail time, as recommended by the prosecution. Many believe he  should have his hitting record deleted from the history books. The perjury  charges against Bonds were dropped, but he was convicted of obstruction of  justice. This conviction was upheld by an appellate court panel in 2013, but  after a rehearing, a larger panel of the court voted 10-1 to overturn his  conviction in 2015. He served as a batting coach for the Miami Marlins in 2016  but was not retained for the 2017 season.
 -------------------------------------------------------------
 SuDoku
  The object is to insert the numbers in the boxes to satisfy only one condition: each row, column and 3x3 box must contain the digits 1 through 9 exactly once. What could be simpler? http://leasingnews.org/Soduku/soduko-main.htm [headlines]     --------------------------------------------------------------
 Daily Puzzle
  How to play:http://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle_frame.htm
 Refresh for current date:http://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle_frame.htm
 [headlines] --------------------------------------------------------------
 
 http://www.gasbuddy.com/http://www.gasbuddy.com/GB_Map_Gas_Prices.aspx
 http://www.gasbuddy.com/GB_Mobile_Instructions.aspx
 [headlines] --------------------------------------------------------------
 Weather
   See USA map, click to specific area, no commercials http://www.weather.gov/ [headlines] --------------------------------------------------------------
 Traffic Live---  Real Time Traffic Information You can save up to 20 different routes and check them out with one click,or type in a new route to learn the traffic live
 -------------------------------- [headlines]
 
 |