Friday, January 13, 2023
Today's Leasing News Headlines
Consumers are Less Financially Anxious Amid
Cooling Inflation and Strong Jobs Market
By Dr. Dan Geller
New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Remote Sales Job Wish List/Apply Now
Introducing Advisory Board Emeritus
Steve Crane, CLFP
New York’s Est. $4.2 Billion Recreational Cannabis Market
Continues to Faces Hurdles to Get Started
Financing Cannabis Funding Sources
Many Work with Third Party Originators
FinTech Bluevine Announces New Corporate Headquarters
in Jersey City, New Jersey to Expand Office Space
AP Equipment Financing Announces
Record Funding Volume in 2022
British Underworld Director Mike Hodges (1932-2022)
Get Carter, The Terminal Man, Flash Gordon,
Croupier, I'll Sleep When I'm Dead,
With Reviews by Leasing News Fernando Croce
Border Collie, Mixed Breed
Bend, Oregon Adopt-a-Dog
News Briefs ----
Capital expense write-offs now harder to come by
for businesses with tax law changes—True Leases on comeback?
Sandwich chain Subway eyes sale
Value Could be at More than $10 Billion
City National Bank will pay $31 million
to settle DOJ’s redlining case/redlining
In a water deficit, Arizona contemplates
a future without Colorado River access
Ritchie Bros. Financial Services funds US$1+ billion
in equipment and vehicle purchases in 2022
Billionaire Larry Ellison ticketed by Lanai cop
on Hawaii island he owns
These Are the World’s Most Traffic Congested Cities
London, Chicago, Paris, Boston New York City
You May Have Missed ---
Google Says Supreme Court Ruling
Could Upend the Internet
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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Consumers are Less Financially Anxious Amid
Cooling Inflation and Strong Jobs Market
By Dr. Dan Geller
The Consumer Price Index rose 6.5 percent annually through last month. Inflation slowed last month thanks to cheaper fuel.
The December Money Anxiety Index decreased to its lowest level since the beginning of the pandemic, in March of 2020, when it peaked at 85.6 index points. The index has been fluctuating and gradually declining ever since, and it reached its lowest-post-pandemic level of 51.4 in December of 2022.
Consumers are feeling more financially confident and less anxious about money due to a very strong jobs market. In December, Nonfarm payroll remained solid with a gain of 223,000 jobs, and an unemployment rate of 3.5%. Additionally, the December Consumer Price Index (CPI) shows that headline CPI fell 0.1%, and excluding food and energy prices it advanced 0.3%, slower from its pace earlier in 2022.
The Theory of Money Anxiety shows that fluctuations in the level of money anxiety impact financial decisions. When money anxiety decreases, people increase their spending, and when money anxiety increases, people reduce their spending. The Money Anxiety Index functions as a behavioral predictor in many models used by financial institutions and investors nationally.
Dr. Dan Geller
Behavioral Economist
for Financial Services
Analyticom LLC
drgeller@analyticom.com
www.analyticom.com
415-891-3093
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New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Austin Borgerding was hired as Credit Analyst, Oakmont Capital Services, Albany, Minnesota. He is located in Freeport, Minnesota. Previously, he was CMT Technician, Independent Testing Technologies (May, 2021 - November, 2022); Financial Analyst, Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC (May, 2018 - May 2021); Insurance Agent, North Risk Partners (October, 2015 - March, 2018).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/austin-borgerding-63704270/
Melanie DelValle was promoted to Director, Digital Finance, Ingram Micro, Irvine, California. She is located in Greenville, South Carolina. She joined the company June, 2014, Business Development Manager, promoted Director, Customer Finance (April, 2021 - December, 2022); Previously, she was Credit Manager, Blue Bridge Financial, LLC (December, 2012 - June, 2014); Credit Risk Analyst, Ingram Micro (September, 2010 - January, 2013); Compliance Analyst (Contractor), Citi (February, 2010 - September, 2010); Consumer Credit Analyst, Assistant Vice President, M&T Bank (October, 2001 - December, 2009); Service Learning Project, Canisius College (2009).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/melaniedelvalle/
Ashtyn Mohanlall, CLFP, was promoted to IT Project Manager First American Equipment Finance, Fairport, New York. She is located in Williamson, New York. She joined firm April, 2013, as Accountant; promoted April, 2014, Portfolio Officer; promoted January, 2016, Senior Financial Analyst; promoted March, 2017, Assistant Vice President, promoted May, 2021, Vice President. Previously, she was Account Specialist, Town & Country Disposal, LLC (March, 2011 - April, 2013); Tax Specialist, Greendyke, Jencik & Associates (December, 2009 - March, 2011). She joined DeJoy, Knauf & Blood, LLP, January, 2008, Tax Intern; promoted August, 2008, Staff Accountant; promoted August, 2009, Experienced Staff Accountant. Certificate: Certified Leasing & Finance Professional (CLFP), CLFP Foundation (Issued, May, 2015).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashtyn-mohanlall-clfp-57667273/
Max Russell was promoted to Remarketing Manager, North Mill Equipment Finance, Norfolk, Connecticut. He is located in Irvine, California. He joined North Mill May, 2020, Asset Manager. Previously, he was Sales and Dispatch, Haynes Group, Inc. (February, 2019 - October, 2019); Sales Representative, Rings End (November, 2017 - December, 2018); Sales Executive, Connecticut Stone (March, 2016 - November, 2017); Pitcher, Los Angeles Angels (2010 - 2014).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/max-russell-4964a5115/
Lori Trusty was promoted to Large Ticket Specialist, Leafe Commercial Capital, Inc., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She joined the firm February, 2011, as Account Executive. She is located in Moberly, Missouri. Previously, she was Executive Assistant II, University of Missouri Women's and Children's Hospital (January, 2006 - January, 2011); Legal Analyst, CitiCapital (December, 1998 - December, 2005).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/lori-trusty-a399a244/
Caitlin Wittler was hire as Account Manager, CMP Capital, Henderson, Nevada. She is located in Bonney Lake, Washington. Previously, she was Broker Relationship Manager, Financial Pacific Leasing, June, 2016 - December, 2022; Personal Financial Representative, JP Morgan Chase (June 2009 - March, 2014).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/caitlin-wittler-85701367
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Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Excellent Compensation/Marketing Support/Work
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Introducing Advisory Board Emeritus
Steve Crane, CLFP
Steve Crane, CLFP, is an original member of the Leasing News Advisory Board from July 2000 and became an Emeritus Member of the Board in December 2020. He is Executive Vice President and the Sales Manager for BSB Leasing, which is super-broker/syndicator headquartered in Colorado. Steve enjoys working remotely from his home in the San Francisco, East Bay Area.
Prior to joining BSB in September of 2014, Steve was Vice President and Marketing Manager for the Indirect Equipment Financing Group at Bank of the West where he worked for nearly 20 years. He graduated from California State University, Sacramento with a Bachelor of Science degree in Finance and has held positions with numerous companies in his career, including Westinghouse Credit, Ingersoll-Rand Financial, CIT and Taylor Financial.
Steve has been an active volunteer in the Leasing and Financing community over the years, holding various positions, including President and Treasurer of the Certified Leasing and Finance Professional Foundation, board member of the former Eastern Association of Equipment Leasing, and conference chairs for The National Association of Equipment Leasing Brokers and National Equipment Finance Association.
Steve is an avid outdoorsman and enjoys traveling, hiking, running, gardening, and sailing. He and his wife Cheryl have a grandson, Declan, and are looking forward to the arrival of a second grandson in May.
Steve Crane, CLFP
Executive Vice President & Sales Manager
BSB Leasing, Inc.
7800 S. Elati St., #201
Littleton, CO 80120
scrane@bsbleasing.com
303-376-4668
Fax: 303-329-0240
www.bsbleasing.com
Steve has been married to his wife Cheryl for 39 years and they have two sons, Ryan and Alex. Ryan is our oldest son, an Engineer for CalFire in Northern California, stationed in Sunol. Alex is an MD in Southern California, and is currently enrolled in a sports medicine fellowship with Kaiser, which will be the focus of his practice going forward.
Son Ryan and fiancé Brooke, daughter-in-law Jess, son Alex, wife Cheryl and Steve
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New York’s Est. $4.2 Billion Recreational Cannabis Market
Continues to Faces Hurdles to Get Started
In April 2021, New York legalized recreational cannabis sales for people aged 21 and older, becoming the 15th state in the country to approve adult-use cannabis sales. Eligible New Yorkers would now be able to possess up to three ounces of cannabis or 24 grams of concentrates with no legal repercussions.
While the legislation didn’t outline a specific schedule for recreational sales, they were expected to begin sometime in 2022. Lawmakers behind the bill and reform advocates predicted that the move to legalize adult-use marijuana in New York could prove to be extremely lucrative, creating a market worth an estimated $4.2 billion and surpassing most other states with recreational markets.
An estimated 40% of the tax revenue generated from recreational cannabis sales in New York would be allocated to Black and Brown communities that had been disproportionately affected by the war on drugs.
However, it will be quite a while before New York’s recreational cannabis industry reaches the heights lawmakers and activists dream of. For starters, we still don’t know when dispensaries will open their doors and begin sales, and entrepreneurs are still waiting eagerly for word from regulators.
Office of Cannabis Management spokesperson Aaron Ghitelman conceded that the state needed more than one recreational cannabis dispensary and that the office was working to approve more stores. New York is currently home to only one dispensary. The Housing Works Cannabis Co. opened its doors for just a few hours on December 29. New York Office of Cannabis Management executive director Chris Alexander made the first ceremonial purchase of the day, buying 100 milligrams of THC gummies and an eighth-ounce of locally grown cannabis flower.
While this was undoubtedly great, a single store is far below the 20 stores that Governor Kathy Hochul had promised before the start of the year. Housing Works Cannabis Co. sold to more than 500 customers in the first four hours after it opened its doors, signifying the immense demand for recreational cannabis among New Yorkers.
Conversely, sales in nearby New Jersey began last April with around 12 operational locations.
It is still unclear when state regulators will allow other adult-use cannabis retailers to open their doors. Furthermore, New York is still plagued by a massive illicit cannabis market, an issue that also affects states such as California that are among the largest cannabis markets in the world.
Alexander pledged to provide more law enforcement to handle New York’s cannabis black market in the wake of numerous cease and desist letters and raids of unlicensed cannabis operations by police and the New York City Sheriff.
As the legal production of adult-use cannabis grows, there is likely to be a bigger market for indoor cultivation equipment, such as that made by Advanced Container Technologies Inc. (OTC: ACTX), as players compete to carve out for themselves a segment of this new market.
Source: Cannisbisnewswire
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Financing Cannabis Funding Sources
Many Work with Third Party Originators
Alliance Commercial Capital
Alternative Finance Network
Cannabis Equipment Leasing
International Financial Services (IFS)
NEC Financial Services
Number One Enterprise
Prime Commercial Lending
Slim Capital
Vertical Companies
XS Equipment Leasing Solutions
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##### Press Release ############################
FinTech Bluevine Announces New Corporate Headquarters
in Jersey City, New Jersey to Expand Office Space
JERSEY CITY, N.J., J -- Bluevine, the leading provider of small business banking solutions, announced its official new company headquarters in Jersey City. As a FinTech leader, Bluevine continues to expand to meet growing demand. Moving the HQ to Jersey City adds to the innovative growth plan for the New Jersey business landscape while expanding its own office space. As part of this update, Bluevine announced its partnership with Rutgers University which includes internship opportunities for students across departments at the leading FinTech, keeping future tech talent in New Jersey.
Eyal Lifshitz, CEO and Founder of Bluevine, said, "With record numbers of new businesses forming each day, Bluevine is poised to support new and seasoned business owners throughout their entrepreneurial journeys with full-stack financial services and industry-leading perks and customer service," said. "I'm so proud of what our team has accomplished thus far, and look forward to this next phase of growth with fresh talent in new cities. Our HQ in Jersey City serves as our new hub to lead our global operations"
Recent office expansions, like the JC headquarters, offer more opportunities for Bluevine's talent and customer growth. In addition, their global footprint has grown with new offices in Austin, Tex., Bengaluru, India, and Karmiel, Israel. Bluevine's offices in Redwood City, Salt Lake City, Tel Aviv and Austin give the company a broad opportunity to source world-class talent, and having headquarters in Jersey City enables access to financial markets and room for further expansion. The company counts hybrid work as a critical tool for global collaboration. Bluevine's entrepreneurial company culture motivates its passionate team to remain laser-focused on building a better financial future for small business owners and shape the company's critical role in economic recovery.
A Great Place to Work certified FinTech leader, Bluevine has experienced significant headcount growth this year and continues to expand its markets across the country and globe. Now ranking among the top SMB-focused banking-services platforms in deposit volume with $650M in deposits, small businesses are choosing Bluevine as a trusted partner for banking services, payment solutions, and lines of credit.
Bluevine is hiring across all offices for engineering, risk, and customer experience roles. For more information about opportunities with Bluevine, please visit https://www.bluevine.com/careers/.
About Bluevine
Bluevine provides small businesses with streamlined banking solutions built for them. Since launching in 2013, Bluevine's innovative and intuitive products, including business checking, bill pay, and line of credit, have helped over 450,000 entrepreneurs save time and money so they can focus on what matters most: growing their business.
Bluevine is backed by leading private and institutional investors, including Lightspeed Venture Partners, Menlo Ventures, 83North, Citi Ventures, ION Crossover Partners, SVB Capital, Nationwide Insurance, and M12 (Microsoft's Venture Arm). Lines of credit are issued by Celtic Bank, a Utah-chartered Industrial Bank, Member of FDIC. Banking Services provided by Coastal Community Bank, Member FDIC.
For more information, please visit bluevine.com or follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter.
### Press Release ############################
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### Press Release ############################
AP Equipment Financing Announces
Record Funding Volume in 2022
Bend, OR - AP Equipment Financing is pleased to announce that the company funded a record $327 million in 2022, representing a 38% year-over-year growth. This achievement is a result of the company's continued focus on its strategic plan to advance technologies, develop competitive streamlined finance programs in underserved markets, expand product offerings and provide a high-quality experience to customers and vendor partners.
The company's success in 2022 reflects the strong demand for equipment financing in the current economic climate, as well as the company's commitment to meeting the needs of its customers and business partners alike
AP is now actively managing a portfolio of nearly 13,000 contracts and $635 million of receivables. In 2022, the company introduced new technologies to streamline and simplify the customer experience by expanding the current functionality of its customer portal. Additionally, the company continued to build strong relationships with customers, vendors, and manufacturers to provide the best customer experience throughout the entire transaction cycle.
Chris Lerma, CLFP, President of AP Equipment Financing, said, "We are thrilled to have achieved such significant growth in funding volume despite challenges we faced with equipment inventory and navigating through the current rate environment.
"This is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our team, as well as the trust and confidence of our customers. We are committed to providing the best possible experience for our customers, and we will continue to invest in technology and expand our product offerings to achieve that goal."
Nick Fong, CLFP, CMO & CTO of AP, said, "We are grateful to our customers for choosing AP Equipment Financing as their partner in equipment financing," said. "We are dedicated to bringing value added technologies that expedite the mundane so that our team can prioritize the lasting relationships that our company builds with its customers.”
About AP Equipment Financing
AP Equipment Financing was founded in 1998 to provide businesses with a fast, easy, and more personalized way to access and finance the specialized equipment financing they need. In 2019, AP Equipment Financing became a wholly owned subsidiary of Tokyo Century USA.
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Watch at Home
by Fernando Croce, Leasing News Movie Reviewer
Better known for his unflinching looks at the British underworld, director Mike Hodges (1932-2022) also made surprising forays into science fiction over the course of his sporadic but punchy career. So check out our list for some of his best features.
Get Carter (1971): Hodges made a smashing feature debut with this tough-as-nails crime drama, which also gave Michael Caine a strong early role. Caine plays Jack Carter, a London gangster whose ruthless style makes him a favorite for cold-blooded underworld assignments. When his brother dies in a supposed accident, he travels to his native Newcastle home, determined to uncover the real cause of his death. What he finds is a seamy network of betrayal and sex, involving local crime boss Cyril (acclaimed playwright John Osborne) along withhis mistress (Geraldine Moffatt) and henchman (Ian Hendry). Icy yet volatile, Caine’s Carter is the epitome of unlawful, early 1970s cool, whose revenge leads to a memorably bleak conclusion. Hodges pulls it all together with assurance, dark-toned style, and acerbichumor.
The Terminal Man (1974): Hodges switches genres from crime to science-fiction in this absorbing adaptation of a novel by “Jurassic Park” writer Michael Crichton. In a striking change from his usual light comedies, George Segal is terrific as Harry Benson, a computer scientist plagued by epileptic seizures and paranoia. Hoping to get cured, he takes part in an experimental surgery that implants electronic devices in his brain. It’s not long before the process backfires and Benson goes on violent rampages, however. With the police on his trail and his mind quickly dissipating, his only hope is Dr. Ross (Joan Hackett), the sympathetic psychiatrist who comes to his help. Making evocative use of Los Angeles locations, Hodges crafts a hauntingly clinical snapshot of a crossroads of humanity and machinery.
Flash Gordon (1980): Though technically still a science-fiction film, this exuberant screen version of the classic comic-strip pulp couldn’t be more different from “The Terminal Man,” or from the rest of Hodges’ filmography, for that matter. Sam Jones stars as square-jawed football jock Flash Gordon, who’s sent on an interplanetary mission to save the Earth from the nefarious Ming the Merciless (Max von Sydow, in a marvelously scenery-chewing performance). Tempted by sexy Princess Aura (Ornella Muti) and challenged by wily Prince Barin (Timothy Dalton), can flash save the day? In place of Hodges’ usual tense, steely darkness, there’s an explosion of surreal color to capture the gaudy feel of the campy material, a pop zest that extends to the story, sets, costumes, and characters.
Croupier (1998): After an extended absence from the big screen, Hodges scored a first-rate comeback with this engrossing drama, which features Clive Owen in a star-making turn. Owen plays Jack Manfred, a struggling young novelist trying to make ends meet by working at the roulette of a casino. The writer’s imagination comes out to play as Jack starts to fantasize about himself as a sleek croupier right out of a James Bond movie. But fiction soon starts bleeding into reality as he becomes involved with Jani (Alex Kingston), a gambler with her own larcenous plan. Is a casino more difficult to knock off than a bank? Sleek and fast-paced, clever and atmospheric, the film finds Hodges deftly mixing suspense, sensuality, and wry humor.
I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead (2003): Hodges re-teams with Clive Owen for his gritty final movie, which fittingly enough plays a lot like a loose reconfiguration of his first. Owen plays Will Graham, a man working in the Welsh countryside who, like Michael Caine in “Get Carter,” finds himself obsessed with vengeful family business. When his drug-dealing younger brother Davey (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) is killed, Will heads back to London and dives deep into its underbelly, reconnecting with a former lover (Charlotte Rampling) and a crime boss (Frank Turner) in his search for the Cockney culprit (Malcom McDowell). Set in a grayish London where luxury cars and nightclubs can’t hide its lethal seediness, this haunting film is a perfect coda for an artist unafraid to head into dark corners.
Fernando Croce is a nationally recognized film reviewer and has been contributing to Leasing News since the summer of 2008. His reviews appear each Friday.
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Border Collie, Mixed Breed
Bend, Oregon Adopt-a-Dog
Debo
ID: 51754109
Male
1 Year Old
46 lbs.
Location: Shelter Kennel
#Dog Kennels
Humane Society of Central Oregon
HS of Central Oregon 6
61170 Se 27th St,
Bend, Or Bend, Oregon, 97702
info@hsco.org
541-382-3537
Website: https://www.hsco.org/
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This Day in American History
1630 – A patent was awarded to the Plymouth Colony in what is now Massachusetts. Founded by the Pilgrims upon their landing there in 1620, it is one of the early successful colonies founded by the British in North America. By 1630, the population has grown to approximately 300.
1733 - James Oglethorpe and 130 English colonists arrive at Charleston, SC
http://georgiahistory.i-found-it.net/georgiahistory1.html
http://www.virtualmuseumofhistory.com/internationalhall/worldleaders/
JAMESOGLETHORPE.COM/
http://ourgeorgiahistory.com/people/oglethorpe.html
http://www.cviog.uga.edu/Projects/jeo300/savanna1.htm
1794 - Congress authorizes an “act making an alteration in the flag of the United States... that from and after the first day of May, 1795, the Flag of the United States be fifteen stripes, alternated red and white; and that the union be fifteen stars, white, in a blue field. The change was made so that Vermont and Kentucky would be represented on the flag. A law passed on April 4, 1818, reduced the number of stripes to 13 to represent the original 13 states, as in the first American flag, and provided one star for each state. A new star was to be added on the Fourth of July following the admission of each new state.
1807 - Birthday of Union General Napoleon Bonaparte Buford (d. 1883), in Woodford, Kentucky. Buford held many commands in the west and was a hero at the Battle of Belmont early in the war. Buford attended West Point and graduated in 1827, sixth out of 38 in his class. After a stint with the frontier military, he was given leave to study law at Harvard. He taught at West Point before leaving the service to become a businessman. He was an engineer and banker in Illinois during the 1840s and 1850s. When the war began, the 54-year-old Buford raised his own regiment, the 27th Illinois. He was commissioned as a colonel, and his unit was sent to Cairo, Illinois, and placed in General Ulysses S. Grant's army. On November 7, 1861, Grant attacked a Confederate camp at Belmont, Missouri, and quickly drove the Rebels away. But Grant's men became preoccupied with plundering the area, and a Confederate counterattack nearly turned to disaster for the Yankees. Buford's regiment was nearly cut off from the main Union force. He rallied his men and they fought their way out of the Confederate trap. Buford was commended for his bravery After Belmont, Buford participated in the capture of Island No. 10, a Confederate stronghold in the Mississippi River, and Buford was left in command after its capture. Buford and his regiment fought at Corinth in October 1862, but the colonel fell seriously ill from sunstroke. He left field command and sat on the court martial of General Fitz John Porter in Washington. Buford returned to the west and was promoted to Brigadier General in charge of the District of Eastern Arkansas. He remained there for the remainder of the war, although his main military action came in chasing off Confederate raiders in the area. Buford generated controversy in his dealings with black troops. He had drawn earlier criticism for not helping refugee slaves, and now he proclaimed his preference for commanding white troops. He justified it by saying that black troops were not as well trained and they were more likely to fall prey to drawn attention from southern bushwhackers. It was also true that Confederate soldiers went out of their way to attack units with Black soldiers, killing all wounded men on the field and shooting prisoners. Buford silenced some of the criticism by implementing programs for freed slaves in Arkansas that generally succeeded in taking care of their immediate needs. Poor health forced his resignation in March 1865, just before the end of the war. He was brevetted to major general following his retirement. He worked in a variety of businesses after the war and died in Chicago in 1883. Napoleon Bonaparte Buford was the older half-brother of John Buford, a Union General who commanded the Union force that first engaged the Confederates.
1808 - Birthday of Salmon Portland Chase (d. 1873) at Cornish, NH. American statesman, US senator, Secretary of the Treasury and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Salmon P. Chase spent much of his life fighting slavery (he was popularly known as “attorney general for runaway Negroes”). He was one of the founders of the Republican Party and his hopes for becoming a candidate for President in 1856 and 1860 were dashed because his unconcealed antislavery views made him unacceptable.
1813 - Captain Oliver Hazard Perry arrives in Presque Isle (Michigan) where he will supervise the construction of a flotilla. Two brigs, a schooner, and three gunboats will be constructed from materials transported overland and by inland waterway from Philadelphia, by way of Pittsburgh, in preparation for the naval battle for Lake Erie, where he carried the flag "Don't Give Up the Ship."
1832 - President Andrew Jackson wrote Vice President Martin Van Buren expressing his opposition to South Carolina's defiance of federal authority. South Carolinians agreed and planned to use armed force to prevent duty collection in the state after February 1, 1833. The Nullification Crisis of 1832-1833 was resolved without bloodshed in March, 1833. Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun, who left the vice presidency at the end of 1832 to serve South Carolina in the Senate, drafted a reduced tariff agreement that pacified South Carolina while allowing the Federal government to stand firm.
(Lower half of: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/jan13.html)
1834 - Birthday of Horatio Alger (d. 1899) at Revere, MA. American clergyman and author of more than 100 popular books for boys (some 20 million copies sold). Honesty, frugality and hard work assured that the heroes of his books would find success, wealth and fame.
1846 - President James Polk dispatched General Zachary Taylor and 4,000 troops to the Texas Border as war with Mexico loomed. Mexico had severed relations with the United States in March, 1845, shortly after the U.S. annexation of Texas
1847 – “Capitulation of Cahuenga" ended all organized resistance to American rule in California as Los Angeles surrendered officially this date. All “rebels” were pardoned by Gen. Kearny. On January 14, California was controlled by the United States military.
http://www.aztecclub.com/campo/CapCahuenga.htm
http://www.militarymuseum.org/Cahuenga.html
http://www.campodecahuenga.com/
1850 - Birthday of Charlotte R. Ray (d. 1911) in NYC. She is the first female black lawyer in the United States and certified as the first woman admitted to practice in Washington, D.C. Many say this is because she signed the application C.R. Ray without using her first name. By 1878, in the face of overwhelming sexual and racial prejudice when not even black men would consult her, she returned to teaching in Brooklyn, NY. http://www.womenshistory.about.com/library/bio/blbio_ray_charlotte.htm
http://www.law.howard.edu/alumni/legalgiants/huslgiantoct2k.htm
http://www.stanford.edu/group/WLHP/papers/CharlotteRay.pdf
1864 - Composer Stephen Foster was found critically ill in his hotel room three days earlier, and on this date, died in Bellevue Hospital, New York, at age 37. He only had 35 cents in his pocket, along with a little slip of paper on which he had written, "Dear friends and gentle hearts." While never a great composer, Foster wrote many of the popular songs of the era which remained a part of Americana for more than a century, including “Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair”, “Oh! Susanna”, “My Old Kentucky Home”, and “Old Folks” at Home, also known as “Swanee River”. Many of his songs - including "Oh! Susanna," "Camptown Races" and "Old Black Joe" - are written in black dialect. Foster gained much of his knowledge of blacks through his early experience in traveling minstrel shows. He became a heavy drinker, suffered from tuberculosis, and lapsed into obscurity. His last song, “Beautiful Dreamer”,which he penned just a few days before his death, joined his earlier classics.
1869 - First Convention of the Colored National Labor Union, the first Black labor convention.
http://www.uwm.edu/Course/448-440/national.htm
http://www.africana.com/Articles/tt_631.htm
http://www.afscme.org/about/aframlink.htm
1873 - P.B.S. Pinchback ends service as first black governor of Louisiana.
http://www.africana.com/Articles/tt_1153.htm
http://www.sec.state.la.us/46.htm
http://www.huarchivesnet.howard.edu/9911huarnet/pbs1.htm
http://www.gnocdc.org/orleans/11/73/snapshot.html
http://66.216.8.84/CreoleCulture/famouscreoles/Pinchback/pinchback.htm
1884 - Grand entertainer Sophie Tucker (d. 1966) was born Sonya Kalish in Tulchyn, Ukraine. She was known as "The Last of the Red Hot Mamas" and her career in stage, film, cabaret, radio, TV and recording lasted more than 60 years, beginning with an appearance at her father's cafe in Hartford, Connecticut in 1905. Tucker's most famous songs were "Some of These Days," recorded in 1926, and "My Yiddish Momma," cut two years later.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/jan13.html
1885 - Birthday of Alfred Carl Fuller (d. 1973), at Kings County, Nova Scotia. Founder of the Fuller Brush Company. In 1906, the young brush salesman went into business on his own, making brushes at a bench between the furnace and the coal bin in his sister's basement.
1886 - A great blizzard struck the state of Kansas without warning. The storm claimed 50 to 100 lives, and eighty percent of the cattle in the state.
1888 - The mercury plunged to -65 degrees at Fort Keough, located near Miles City, MT. The reading stood as a record for the continental U.S. for sixty-six years
1892 - An Atlantic coast storm produced a record 18.6 inches of snow at Norfolk, VA, including 17.7 inches in 24 hours. The storm also produced 9.5 inches of snow at Raleigh, NC, and brought snow to northern Florida for the first time in 35 years.
1893 – US Marines landed in Honolulu from the USS Boston to prevent the queen from abrogating the Bayonet Constitution. This was also known as the 1887 Constitution of the Kingdom of Hawaii, a legal document by anti-monarchists to strip the Hawaiian monarchy of much of its authority, initiating a transfer of power to American, European and native Hawaiian elites.
1909 - Birthday of trombonist Quentin “Butter” Jackson (d. 1976), Springfield, OH. With Duke Ellington from 1948 to 1959.
1910 - Radio pioneer and electron tube inventor Lee de Forest arranged the world's first radio broadcast to the public at New York, NY. He succeeded in broadcasting the voice of Enrico Caruso along with other stars of the Metropolitan Opera to several receiving locations in the city where listeners with earphones marveled at wireless music from the air. Though only a few were equipped to listen, it was the first broadcast to reach the public and the beginning of a new era in which wireless radio communication became almost universal.
1912 - Delta Sigma Theta, sorority, founded on the campus of Howard University.
http://www.deltasigmatheta.org/history/index.htm
1912 - The temperature at Oakland, MD, plunged to 40 degrees below zero to establish a state record.
1919 – Actor Robert Stack (d. 2003) was born in LA. In addition to acting in more than 40 feature films, he starred as Treasury agent Eliot Ness in the ABC-TV television series “The Untouchables” (1959–63), for which he won the 1960 Emmy for Best Actor in a Dramatic Series. He later hosted “Unsolved Mysteries” (1987–2002).
1922 - Former White Sox star Buck Weaver applied for reinstatement to baseball. Weaver, one of the eight "Black Sox" players banned for their involvement in throwing the 1919 World Series, was rejected by Commissioner Landis.
1926 - Birthday of arranger/trombonist Melba Liston (d. 1999), Kansas City, MO.
http://hardbop.tripod.com/liston.html
http://elvispelvis.com/melbaliston.htm
http://www.jazzreview.com/articledetails.cfm?ID=438
1926 - Birthday of Gwen Verdon (d. 2000), Culver City, Los Angeles, CA. One of Broadway's premier female dancers and actresses, many of her most successful roles were choreographed by her husband Bob Fosse. She won Tony Awards for “Can-Can”, “Damn Yankees”, “New Girl in Town” and “Redhead”. She also acted in movies, including “Cocoon” and the film adaptation of “Damn Yankees”. She starred in the original Broadway production, which my mother and father took me to see and I will never forget her performance, especially being a Brooklyn Dodger fan.
http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0893862/
http://www.povonline.com/cols/COL317.htm
1927 - A woman takes a seat on the NY Stock Exchange breaking the all-male tradition.
1929 - Birthday of guitarist Joe Pass (d. 1994) born Joseph Anthony Jacobi Passalacqua, New Brunswick, NJ.
http://www.riffinteractive.com/expguitar/JoePass1.htm
http://www.classicjazzguitar.com/albums/artists_albums.jsp?artist=55
http://www.gould68.freeserve.co.uk/JoePass.html
1930 - The comic strip "Mickey Mouse" debuted in American newspapers, with Floyd Gottfredson as its ghost writer.
1931 - The bridge connecting New York and New Jersey is named the George Washington Memorial Bridge.
1933 - Making her first professional basketball appearance, Babe (Mildred) Didrikson scored nine points as the Brooklyn Yankees defeated the Long Island Ducklings.
1936 - Baptist clergyman B.B. McKinney, 50, wrote the words and tune to the gospel song, "Wherever He Leads, I'll Go," a few days before the opening of a Sunday School convention in Alabama.
1937 - The United States bars Americans from serving in the Civil War in Spain.
1938 - For Victor Records, singer Allan Jones recorded "The Donkey Serenade", which became the song most often associated with him. Allan also sang and acted in several Marx Brothers films including: "A Night at the Opera", "A Day at the Races". The film that made him a star was the operetta, "Firefly" with Jeanette MacDonald. Singer Jack Jones is the son of Allan and his actress wife, Irene Hervey ("The Count of Monte Cristo", "Play Misty for Me").
1941 - The four Modernaires came to sang with the Glenn Miller Band on a full time basis. In 1946, they had a ‘solo' hit with "To Each His Own".
1941 - Charlie Spivak records with own band first time. Okey label.
1942 - Henry Ford patented the plastic automobile, which decreased the weight of a car by 30%.
1942 - German U-Boats begin operations of the US East Coast. The move is called operation Paukenschlag (Drum Roll). Admiral Doenitz has faced arguments from his superiors in the German Navy who do not favor the operation, and he has had the difficulty that only the larger 740-ton U-Boats are really suitable for such long range patrols. When Doenitz gives the order for the attack to begin there are 11 U-Boats in position and 10 more en route. Together they sink more than 150,000 tons during the first month. Intelligence sources have given reasonable warning of the attack but the U-Boats find virtually peace-time conditions in operation. Ship sail with lights on at night; lighthouses and buoys are still lit; there is no radio discipline - merchant ships often give their positions in plain text; there are destroyer patrols (not convoys with escorts) but these are regular and predictable and their crews are naturally inexperienced.
1943 – Richard Moll, who played bailiff Bull Shannon on “Night Court” was born in Pasadena, CA.
1949 - Top Hits
“Buttons and Bows” - Dinah Shore
“On a Slow Boat to China” - The Kay Kyser Orchestra (vocal: Harry Babbitt & Gloria Wood)
“A Little Bird Told Me” - Evelyn Knight
“I Love You So Much It Hurts” - Jimmy Wakely
1953 - Don Barksdale becomes the first Black person to play in an NBA All-Star Game.
http://sports.insidebayarea.com/top50.asp?story=Don_Barksdale
http://thisweek.kqed.org/segments/390/
1955 - Chase National Bank (founded in 1877) and the Bank of Manhattan Company (founded in 1799 as a water company) agreed to merge, becoming the second largest bank in the U.S.
1957 - The Wham-O Company developed the first plastic Frisbee. The most popular theory as to how this flying disc came to be dates back to the 1920s when Yale students invented a game of catch by tossing around metal pie tins from the Frisbee Baking Company in nearby Bridgeport, Connecticut. They would frequently shout “Frisbieeeee” to warn passersby of the oncoming pie plate. Building inspector Fred Morrison puttered with and refined a plastic flying disc that he sold to WHAM-O (for $1 million) on this day in 1955. The disc was introduced to the consumer market in 1957 as the Pluto Platter (the name inspired by the U.S. obsession with UFOs). Wham-O changed the name to Frisbee in 1958, upon hearing the Yale pie-tin story. (Mattel now owns the rights to Frisbee, which has become an American icon.)
1957 - For Victor Records in Hollywood, California, Elvis Presley recorded "All Shook Up" and "That's When Your Heartaches Begin" which became Elvis' ninth consecutive gold record.
1957 - Top Hits
Singing the Blues - Guy Mitchell
The Banana Boat Song - The Tarriers
Moonlight Gambler - Frankie Laine
Singing the Blues - Marty Robbins
1958 - Little Richard releases "Good Golly Miss Molly."
1961 - In the first round of the Los Angeles Open golf tournament, golfing great Arnie Palmer scored an embarrassing 12 strokes on one hole.
1961 – Julia Louis-Dreyfuss was born in NYC. She is best remembered as Elaine in the smash series “Seinfeld” (1989–1998). Subsequently she has appeared in “The New Adventures of Old Christine” (2006–10), and “Veep” (2012–present).
1962 - Singer Chubby Checker set a record, literally, with the hit, "The Twist". The song reached the #1 position for an unprecedented second time in two years. "The Twist" was also number one on September 26, 1960. The song, widely considered one of the most successful singles of all time, was on the Top 100 charts for 39 weeks, longer than any other single except "Red Red Wine" by UB40. When an early recording of "The Twist" by Hank Ballard and the Midnighters became the top dance song on Dick Clark's “American Bandstand”but failed to get much radio play, Clark suggested that a new artist should record a cover. Singer Ernest Evans of Cameo Records recorded the song and changed his name to Chubby Checker as a takeoff on Fats Domino. The song hit the charts in 1960 when it became immensely popular with teenagers, but adults started buying the record in 1962, after Chubby Checker sang "The Twist" on Ed Sullivan's October 22 show.
1962 - First Operation Farm Gate missions flown.
In the first Farm Gate combat missions, T-28 fighter-bombers are flown in support of a South Vietnamese outpost under Viet Cong attack.
By the end of the month, U.S. Air Force pilots had flown 229 Farm Gate sorties. Operation Farm Gate was initially designed to provide advisory support to assist the South Vietnamese Air Force in increasing its capability. The 4400th Combat Crew Training Squadron arrived at Bien Hoa Airfield in November, 1961 and began training South Vietnamese Air Force personnel with older, propeller-driven aircraft. In December, President John F. Kennedy expanded Farm Gate to include limited combat missions by the U.S. Air Force pilots in support of South Vietnamese ground forces. By late 1962, communist activity and combat intensity had increased so much that President Kennedy ordered a further expansion of Farm Gate. In early 1963, additional aircraft arrived and new detachments were established at Pleiku and Soc Trang. In early 1964, Farm Gate was upgraded again with the arrival of more modern aircraft. In October, 1965, another squadron of A-1E aircraft was established at Bien Hoa. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara approved the replacement of South Vietnamese markings on Farm Gate aircraft with regular U.S. Air Force markings. By this point in the war, the Farm Gate squadrons were flying 80 percent of all missions in support of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). With the buildup of U.S. combat forces in South Vietnam and the increase in U.S. Air Force presence there, the role of the Farm Gate program gradually decreased in significance. The Farm Gate squadrons were moved to Thailand in 1967, and from there they launched missions against the North Vietnamese in Laos.
1962 - Center Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia Warriors set an NBA regular season record by scoring 73 points in a game against Chicago. Chamberlain had scored 78 points in the previous December, but that game had gone into three overtime periods.
1964 - Capitol released in the United States The Beatles' single “I Want to Hold Your Hand/I Saw Her Standing There”.
1965 - Top Hits
“I Feel Fine” - The Beatles
“She's a Woman” - The Beatles
“Love Potion Number Nine” - The Searchers
“Once a Day” - Connie Smith
1965 - After the NBA All-Star game in which San Francisco Warriors center Wilt Chamberlain scored 20 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, the Warriors shocked the basketball world by announcing that they were trading Chamberlain to the Philadelphia 76ers for three minor leaguers and $150,000.
1965 - Bob Dylan releases "The Times They Are A-Changin'".
1966 - On "Bewitched," Elizabeth Montgomery's character, Samantha, gave birth to her first child, Tabitha. The witch's daughter could wiggle her nose with her finger and cause problems for daddy, Darin, just like mom.
1967 - The Dead, Junior Wells' Chicago Blues Band, & the Doors at the Fillmore, San Francisco, California.
1968 - Against the advice of Columbia Records executives, Johnny Cash visits Folsom State Prison in California to record a live album. The resulting LP, "Live At Folsom Prison" would become one of Johnny's biggest selling records, reaching #1 on the Country album chart and #13 on the Hot 200. It also produced one of his most memorable hit singles, "Folsom Prison Blues". In 2003, "Live at Folsom Prison" was certified Triple Platinum by the RIAA for sales of over three million and was ranked #88 on Rolling Stone Magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
1968 - Cream's "Sunshine of Your Love" enters the pop charts.
1968 - Dr. K.C. Pollack of the University of Florida audio lab reports tests have found that the noise generated at rock & roll concerts is harmful to teenage ears.
1968 - In a game between the Minnesota North Stars and the Oakland Seals, Minnesota rookie center Bill Masterton was checked into the boards and fell heavily on his head. He suffered massive brain damage and died two days later, the only fatality in NHL history.
1969 - After his triumphant '68 "comeback" special, Elvis Presley decides to take more control of his career and begins recording in Memphis for the first time since he left Sun Records. Over the next three weeks at Chips Moman's American Recording Studios, Elvis records the songs that would return him to the top of the charts ("Suspicious Minds" and "In The Ghetto" chief among them).
1969 - The Beatles release “Yellow Submarine”.
1973 - Carly Simon's album “No Secrets” hits #1.
1973 - Eric Clapton came back from his three-year heroin addiction problem with a concert at the Rainbow club in London. Clapton, helped and encouraged by Pete Townshend of the Who, was back on the album charts in 1974 with "461 Ocean Boulevard”.
1972 – President Nixon announces that 70,000 U.S. troops will leave South Vietnam over the next three months, reducing U.S. troop strength there by May 1 to 69,000 troops. Since taking office, Nixon had withdrawn more than 400,000 American troops from Vietnam. With the reduction in total troop strength, U.S. combat deaths were down to less than 10 per week. However, Nixon still came under heavy criticism from those who charged that he was pulling out troops but, by turning to the use of air power instead of ground troops, was continuing the U.S. involvement in Vietnam rather than disengaging from the war. The last American troops would be withdrawn in March, 1973 under the provisions of the Paris Peace Accords.
1972 - The Beach Boys' "Surfin'" is getting airplay in Los Angeles and enters Billboard, moving up the Hot 100 chart at #118.
1973 - Carly Simon's "No Secrets" was the #1 album in the U.S. for the first of five weeks. The tracks: "The Right Thing to Do", "The Carter Family", "You're So Vain", "His Friends are More Than Fond of Robin", "(We Have) No Secrets", "Embrace Me You Child", "Waited So Long", "It Was So Easy", "Night Owl" and "When You Close Your Eyes".
1973 - Top Hits
“Me and Mrs. Jones” - Billy Paul
“Clair” - Gilbert O'Sullivan
“You're So Vain” - Carly Simon
“She's Got to Be a Saint” - Ray Price
1974 - A Gallup poll on religious worship showed that fewer Protestants and Roman Catholics were attending weekly services than ten years earlier, but that attendance at Jewish worship services had increased over the same period.
1974 - 37 people were injured in a melee outside the Tower Records store in Los Angeles after the crowd discovered that singer Steve Miller was not going to be at a post-concert party at the store. The organizers forgot to invite him. Miller's single and album "The Joker" were riding high on the charts at the time.
1974 - Super Bowl VIII (at Houston): Miami Dolphins 24, Minnesota Vikings 7. The Dolphins win their second straight Super Bowl. Fran Tarkenton and the Vikings are the victims. MVP: Dolphins' RB Larry Csonka whose 145 yards rushing led the way. Tickets: $15.00
http://images.nfl.com/history/images/0113.jpg.
1976 - Sarah Caldwell, The Divine Miss Sarah, became the first woman to conduct an opera at the Metropolitan, Verdi's “La Traviata”. Founder of the highly successful and artistically marvelous Boston Opera Company, she was the second woman in the history of the New York Philharmonic to conduct its orchestra (1975). Devoted to her Boston Opera Company and opera in general, she uses off-beat methods to draw customers by using stage innovations which included such things as motorcycles and circus acts. She was born 03-05-24.
http://www2.worldbook.com/features/whm/html/whm068.html
http://www.smithsonianassociates.org/programs/cassettes/caldwell.HTM
1978 - Elvis Presley's version of Paul Anka's "My Way" goes gold in five months after the King's death. Earlier, it had become one of Presley's 78 Top Twenty-five hits.
1979 – The YMCA sued the Village People for copyright infringement over their song of the same name. The suit is eventually dropped.
1980 - The Grateful Dead, Beach Boys and Jefferson Starship are the featured acts at a benefit concert for the people of Kampuchea, held at the Oakland Coliseum.
1981 - Top Hits
“(Just Like) Starting Over” - John Lennon
“Love on the Rocks” - Neil Diamond
“Hungry Heart” - Bruce Springsteen
“I Think I'll Just Stay Here and Drink” - Merle Haggard
1982 - Air Florida Flight 90, a Boeing 737, attempted to take off from Washington's National Airport in one of the worst blizzards in history. Ice had built up on the wings of the jetliner as it waited its turn to take off, preventing it from gaining altitude. After crashing into the 14th Street Bridge, the plane fell into the Potomac River. 74 of the 79 people on the aircraft were killed in the accident. Four people on the bridge were killed.
1982 - The worst Louisiana rainstorm in more than 100 years came to an end. More than 18 inches fell at Vinton, LA, during the three day storm. Flooding was widespread, and property damage was estimated at 100 to 200 million dollars. President Reagan visited the state and declared ten parishes in northeastern Louisiana disaster areas.
1982 – Hank Aaron and Frank Robinson were elected to Baseball’s Hall of Fame. Aaron established a major league record with 755 HRs, while Robinson led the Baltimore Orioles to two World Championships and was named MVP in both the American and National Leagues. Aaron falls nine votes shy of becoming the first-ever unanimous selection, and his 97.8 election percentage was then second only to Ty Cobb’s 98.2 percent in the inaugural 1936 election. Robinson was also the first African-American manager in Major League history and hit 583 HRs.
1984 - Wayne Gretzky extended his consecutive scoring streak to 45 games, but the Edmonton Oilers winning streak ended at an unlucky 13 when Gretzky and company lost to the Buffalo Sabres, 3-1.
1985 - While not a date in American history, Otto Bucher of Switzerland became the oldest golfer to record a hole-in-one when he aced the 12th hole at a golf course in Spain. Burcher was 99 years old.
1986 - NCAA member schools voted overwhelmingly in convention to adopt Proposition 48, a controversial attempt to raise the academic performance of student-athletes. Prop 48 required incoming freshmen to score 700 or more on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) or 15 on the American College Testing (ACT) exam or graduate from high school with a 2.0 grade point average in order to be eligible for athletics during freshman year.
1986 - For the first time in about 10 years, "The Wall Street Journal" broke with tradition and printed a real, honest-to-goodness picture on its front page. The story was about artist O. Winston Link and featured one of his works.
1988 - A fast moving cold front ushered arctic cold into the north central and northeastern U.S. Mason City, IA reported a wind chill reading of 51 degrees below zero, and Greenville, ME reported a wind chill of 63 degrees below zero. Winds along the cold front gusted to 63 mph at Rochester, NY, and a thunderstorm along the cold front produced wind gusts to 62 mph at Buffalo with snow and sleet.
1989 - Half a dozen cities in the northeastern U.S. reported record low temperatures for the date, including Elkins, WV, with a reading of 13 degrees below zero. Watertown, NY was the cold spot in the nation with a morning low of 37 degrees below zero
1989 - Top Hits
“Every Rose Has Its Thorn” - Poison
“My Prerogative” - Bobby Brown
“Two Hearts” - Phil Collins
“Hold Me” - K.T. Oslin
1990 – Douglas Wilder became the first elected African American governor as he takes office in Richmond, VA.
1990 – A winter storm in the southwestern U.S. produced more than a twelve inches of snow in the mountains of California and Nevada. In northern California, Huntington Lake was buried under 40 inches of snow, and up to 20 inches was reported in northeastern Nevada. Heavy rain soaked some of the lower elevations of California. Gibraltar Dam, CA was drenched with 5.33 inches of rain in two days.
1992 – United States serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer pleaded guilty but insane to the murders of 15 young men and boys. He had kept parts of his victim in his refrigerator, and also claimed to be a cannibal. He was later murdered in by an inmate who said, “God had told me to do this.”
1992 – Japan apologized for forcing Korean women to act as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during World War II but refuses to pay reparations.
1994 – GTE, General Telephone & Electric, once the largest independent telephone system in the US, was in the midst of a massive restructuring program designed to “streamline” its operations for the dawning “multimedia age”. It announced that it was taking a $1.8 billion pretax charge for the fourth quarter of 1993 and, in the process, planned to slash its staff by some 17,000 jobs. GTE chairman Charles R. Lee declared the moves necessary for the company’s future, noting that without a “competitive structure”, GTE would likely “blow up.” However, this logic didn’t mollify GTE’s primary union, the Communications Workers of America, which derided the lay-offs as “yet another example of a highly profitable company eliminating…the people who helped build the company and created its technology to further enhance the bottom line.” In 2000, GTE merged with Bell Atlantic, one of the RBOCs spun off by the break-up of AT&T in the consent decree. The merged entity was renamed Verizon.
1996 – The Medals of Honor were awarded to African-American servicemen for service in World War II by President Clinton at a ceremony in the White House, Washington, DC. None of the 1.7 million African-Americans who served in World War II had received a Medal of Honor despite the many documented cases of bravery that were presented to officials of the armed forces. Of the seven servicemen who received the medal at the ceremony, the only one still alive was Vernon Baker, a 77-year-old retired career Army officer. Medals were awarded posthumously to staff Sergeant Edward A. Carter, J., of Los Angeles, First Lieutenant Charles L. Thomas of Detroit, Private George Watson of Birmingham, AL, First Lieutenant John R. Fox of Boston, Private First Class Willy F. James, Jr., of Kansas City, KS, and Staff Sergeant Ruben Rivers of Tecumseh, OK.
1998 – Baltimore and Minnesota combine to set an NFL record with three kickoff return touchdowns in the same game, all in the first quarter of the Vikings’ 38-28 victory. Corey Harris and Patrick Johnson score for the Ravens while David Palmer turns the trick for Minnesota. Vikings kicker Gary Anderson sets an NFL record when he converts his 34th consecutive field goal.
1999 – “The Sopranos” TV Premiere. The thinking viewer’s mob drama features James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano, whose panic attacks drive him to seek out a psychiatrist (Lorraine Bracco). The HBO drama revolves around Tony’s home and crime lives. TV Guide has named the series one of the greatest TV shows of all time.
http://www.hbo.com/sopranos/
2000 - Microsoft chairman Bill Gates announced that he would be stepping down as Microsoft chief executive and handing over the reins to longtime friend and company president Steve Ballmer. Gates assumed the title of ‘chief software architect'.
2011 - Just two months after The Beatles back catalogue became available on iTunes, their sales figures topped 5 million songs according to Hudson Square Research. During that period, the legendary group also moved more than a million full-length albums.
2014 – Alex Rodriguez filed a lawsuit in federal court against Major League Baseball and the Major League Baseball Players Association…and anything that breathed…seeking to overturn the 162-game suspension handed two days earlier by arbitrator Frederic Horowitz. The suspension was upheld and A-Rod sat out the entire 2014 season.
2014 - In West Virginia, 10 people were hospitalized and 300,000 people have been unable to use tap water for four days since 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, an industrial chemical, leaked into the Elk River.
Super Bowl Champions:
1974 - Miami Dolphins
National Baseball Hall of Fame inductees:
1972 – Hank Aaron and Frank Robinson
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