Monday, January 23, 2023
Today's Leasing News Headlines
"The new one is the completion of the project," Reid
Raykovich, CLFP, Certified Lease and Finance Foundation,
told Leasing News re: Odessa Update CLFP Digital Program
New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Sales Champions! Access Unlimited Income Potential
Introducing Leasing News Advisor
Randy Haug
Take the Recruiter Index
Report from the Front Line
Top Ten Leasing News Read by Readers
January 17 - January 19
The Shift: The Upheaval in Big Law
Will Make History
ELFA to Host Quarterly Innovation Roundtables in 2023
Association recognizes members of 2023
Innovation Advisory Council
Mixed Breed
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Adopt-a-dog
ELFA 34th Annual National Funding Conference
Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, March 14 -16
News Briefs ----
San Francisco Bay Area defies tech layoffs,
powers to big job gains in December
Mortgage rates too high?
Not according to inflation
How the U.S. Government Amassed
$31 Trillion in Debt
You May Have Missed ---
A 100-foot tree smashed a Sacramento family’s home
How will they pay for the damage?
Broker/Funder/Industry Lists | Features (wrilter's columns)
Top Ten Stories Chosen by Readers | Top Stories last six months
Sales Make It Happen
Sports Brief----
California Nuts Brief---
"Gimme that wine"
This Day in History
SuDoku
Daily Puzzle
GasBuddy
Weather, USA or specific area
Traffic Live----
Wordle
######## surrounding the article denotes it is a “press release,” it was not written by Leasing News nor has the information been verified. The source noted. When an article is signed by the writer, it is considered a “byline.” It reflects the opinion and research of the writer.
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"The new one is the completion of the project," Reid Raykovich, CLFP, Certified Lease and Finance Foundation told Leasing News re: Odessa Update CLFP Digital Program
In February 2019, Odessa, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania announced "Online Re-Certification is delivered in the cloud, integrated with a seamless payment gateway, to efficiently manage the annual re-certification activity of certification holders. CLFP’s may now complete their learning, test, payment and commitment to giving online."
Reid Raykovich, CLFP, Executive Director of the CLFP Foundation, said on the behalf of the board, “Industry members increasingly want to the ability to customize their learning schedules and programs. Odessa’s experience and technical capabilities will be a valuable resource for us as we continue to modernize and evolve our offerings.” (1)
On Janury 19, 2023, Odessa sent out a press release that "Developed with Odessa’s technology and the CLFP ‘body of knowledge’ from experts across leasing law, accounting and tax, origination and servicing, and sales and marketing, the digital ALFP is packed with expert videos, guided learning modules, and practice quizzes. Participants can elect to take the course to upskill their domain knowledge – and, in preparation to sit for the CLFP exam."
Raykovich said, "By working with Odessa to launch the digital ALFP, we are revolutionizing not only how we work but how we are able to better serve our industry members, worldwide... we are revolutionizing not only how we work but how we are able to better serve our industry members, worldwide” (2)
Access the learning portal for more: https://clfp-odessainc.talentlms.com/
(1) Odessa and CLFP Foundation Collaborate to Drive Innovation in Certification Program
https://www.elfaonline.org/news/industry-news/read/2020/02/25/odessa-and-clfp-foundation-collaborate-to-drive-innovation-in-certification-program
(2) Odessa and CLFP Foundation Launch a Digital-First Learning Experience
https://www.odessainc.com/blog/odessa-and-clfp-foundation-launch-a-digital-first-learning-experience/
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New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Cheryl Baker, CLFP, started a new position as Director of Strategic Initiatives at Balboa Capital, a division of Ameris Bank, Irvine, California. She is located in Troy, Michigan. Previously, she was Director, Commercial Finance Operations, Crestmark, a division of MetaBank (July, 2017- June, 2022); Documentation Manager, Lease Corporation of America (September, 1997 - July, 2017); Commercial Lending Biller, Standard Federal Bank (March, 1992 - September, 1997).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/cheryl-baker-clfp-7a9bb73b/
Dennis Bolton, ASD, was promoted to Head of Equipment Finance, North America, Gordon Brothers, Boston, Massachusetts. He is located in Charlotte, North Carolina. He joined the firm May, 2020, as Senior Managing Director. Previously, he was SVP, Equipment Management Group (August, 2005 - May, 2020); SVP-EMG Manager, Corp. Aviation, Commercial and Corp. Banking, Structured Lease Finance (October, 2008 - 2011); Managing Director, Equipment Management Group, Wachovia Equipment Finance (August, 2005 - October, 2008); Vice President Remarketing Manager, Banc of America Leasing and Capital (March, 2003 -August, 2005); Vice President, Remarketing Manager, Fleet Capital Leasing (1990 - 2003).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/dennis-bolton-asa-1640009/
Aaron Gehlken was hired as Vice President of Sales, Dext Capital, Lake Oswego, Oregon. He is located at the Irvine, California office. Previously, he was Assistant Vice President, Wintrust Commercial Finance (March, 2022 - January, 2023).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/gehlken/details/experience/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/gehlken/
Ryan Lake was promoted to Managing Director, Arlington Capital Advisors, Phoenix, Arizona. He is located in Chandler, Arizona. He specializes "...Specializing in mergers, acquisitions and capital raises for beverage, cannabis, restaurant and franchise brands and businesses." He joined the firm as Principal, June, 2019. Previously, he was at OMAC Beverage Advisors, starting January, 2010, Vice President, promoted Director (January, 2015). Prior, he was at GE Capital, starting August, 2000, Associate, Beverage Finance, promoted August, 2007, Assistant Vice President, Beverage and Structure Finance.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandlake/
Jesse Sorenson, CLFP, was promoted to Business Development, KLC Financial, Minnetonka, Minnesota. He joined KLC September, 2021, as Business Development Manager. Previously, he was Sales Manager Stauer (August, 2020 - September, 2021).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesse-sorenson/
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Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Excellent Compensation/Marketing Support/Work
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Leasing News Advisor
Randy Haug
Randy Haug | EVP/ Co-Founder
LTi Technology Solutions
w: 402.493.3445 ext. 1014
Mobile: 402-981-3155
rhaug@ltisolutions.com
www.ltisolutions.com
Randy Haug is the EVP, Vice Chairman, and Co-Founder at LTi. He is responsible for overseeing the market direction and strategies of LTi and serves as an advisor to clients regarding their business issues and strategies. He has spent the majority of his career in the equipment finance industry, working and mentoring LTi’s Executive Management Group, Divisional Managers, Product Managers, Sales, Account Managers, and Marketing team.
He is widely considered an industry thought leader and uses his consultative problem-solving and mentoring skills set to improve the lives of those at LTi as well as those in the industry with whom he collaborates with.
He also enjoys working with both of his sons in the business, who have become Subject Matter Experts and leaders in their own right. While EVP, Vice Chairman, and Co-Founder is his primary job function by day, Randy also loves traveling, as well as spending time with his family, friends, his grandson, and new granddaughter.
He has participated in a number of different industry associations, including as a member of the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association, (ELFA) Advocacy Advisory Committee; Executive Committee Board Member & Development Committee Chair for Equipment Leasing and Finance Foundation (ELFF); Board of Trustee to ELFF; Past President of the National Equipment and Finance Association (NEFA); and Current Chair and Co-Founder of the Chris Walker Education Committee of NEFA. He has also participated in a number of different industry association committees in both the ELFA and NEFA associations and has been an industry speaker and panelist at a number of educational events within those associations.
Randy is a servant leader and has sat on board level positions in many industry companies and organizations. Randy had been involved in the Equipment Finance industry for 34 years while at LTI Technology Solutions, Inc. and its previously named LeaseTeam, Inc. company.
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Take the Recruiter Index
Report from the Front Line
The Recruiter Index™ is Recruiter.com's monthly U.S. job market report based on the insights of recruiters, HR pros, and talent acquisition experts as well as leasing and finance company recruiters..
Take the survey today, and you'll receive the full report on February 2rd.
https://go.recruiter.com/recruiter-index-job-market
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Top Ten Leasing News Read by Readers
January 17 - January 19
(1) Computing Interest Rates Programs
For Use in New State Commercial Finance Laws
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_19.htm#computing
(2) Email from Steve Crane, CLFP
Responses to Friday Leasing News
Introducing the Advisors
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_17.htm#email
(3) No Longer taking Broker/Discounting Business
plus Leasing Companies Out of Business
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_17.htm#no
(4) New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_19.htm#hires
(5) New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_17.htm#hires
(6) License and Registration United States
By Kenneth C. Greene, Attorney
A State-by-State Analysis of License Requirements for Lenders
and Brokers
https://leasingnews.org/archives/Jan2023/01_19.htm#license
(7) North Mill Equipment Finance Unveils
Powerful New Customer Portal
North Mill Equipment Finance Unveils Powerful New Customer Portal
(8) Bank of the West’s $16.3 billion acquisition
gets regulatory green light
https://www.northbaybusinessjournal.com/article/article/bank-of-the-wests-16-3-billion-acquisition-gets-regulatory-green-light/
(9) Why some cars from the 1990s
are soaring in value
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/16/business/1990s-cars-collectible
(10) America’s largest party supply store
files for bankruptcy
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/18/business/party-city-bankruptcy/index.html
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The Shift: The Upheaval in Big Law
Will Make History
The lower legal services demand environment is placing more pressure on law firms, partnerships and individual lawyers to make all sorts of choices that will define themselves and their firms for years to come. Law firm partnerships are undergoing big decisions about whether to merge, law firm executives are considering layoffs, some partner groups are splitting off for other firms, and some top lawyers are changing firms this year or starting their own boutiques.
Source: ALM/LAW.com
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### Press Release ############################
ELFA to Host Quarterly Innovation Roundtables in 2023
Association recognizes members of 2023 Innovation Advisory Council
Washington, D.C. – In recognition of the critical importance of innovation in today’s rapidly shifting business environment, the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association will present four Innovation Roundtables in 2023. These virtual events will allow equipment finance professionals to find out what is on the minds of their peers, share ideas and discover new approaches for tackling their innovation challenges.
Deborah Reuben, CEO & Founder of TomorrowZone, Chair of the ELFA Innovation Advisory Council and facilitator of the Roundtables, said, “In our busy lives, there is a danger of getting stuck in the day-to-day and not connecting with new ideas and possibilities for the future,” said “Don’t risk being left behind! Join our 2023 Innovation Roundtables to connect with your colleagues and gain fresh insights on how to be future-ready.”
The 2023 roundtables will be held on Feb. 16, May 18, Aug. 10 and Nov. 16. Members of the ELFA Innovation Advisory Council will select the topics and serve as guest speakers and discussion leaders at each roundtable. The format combines large and small group guided discussion and facilitated, peer-to-peer idea exchanges allowing attendees to dive into hot innovation topics and what they mean for equipment finance.
Planning Committee
ELFA is pleased to recognize the subject matter experts on the 2023 Innovation Advisory Council who are involved in presenting the Innovation Roundtables:
• Deborah Reuben, CLFP, CEO & Founder, TomorrowZone (Council Chair)
• Michael Baez, VP, Professional Services and Customer Strategy, Leasepath
• Barry Beer, Business Technology Strategy Director, Dell Financial Services
• Tina Cartwright, CLFP, SVP Information Technology and Operations, Equipment Finance, U.S. Bank
• John Cooper, Director, NAFTA Financial Services Business Solutions, CNH Industrial Capital LLC
Andrew Cotter, EVP, Chief Information Officer Somerset Capital Group, Ltd.
• Lisa Fitzgerald, Director - Business Capital Technology, CIT
• Roman Gajda, Director of Financial Technology Solutions, ENGS Commercial Finance Co.
• Kaheres Hahn, Finova Capital, LLC
• Martin Klotzman, CLFP, Senior Manager Marketing and Product Management, Ivory Consulting Corporation
• Jennifer Martin, CLFP, SVP, Sales Enablement and Initiative Support, Key Equipment Finance
• Jillian Munson, Product Manager, QuickFi by Innovation Finance USA LLC
• Tyson Norman, Director of Technical Infrastructure and Chief Information Security Officer, Caterpillar Financial Services
• Sheila Oliver, Global Product Manager, Retail Product Families, John Deere Financial
• Robert Preville, CEO, APPROVE
• Eldon Richards, CTO, Solifi
• Rafael Rosato, Chief Innovation Officer, DLL
• Tawnya Stone, CLFP, Vice President, Strategic Technology, GreatAmerica Financial Services
• Denis Stypulkoski, Founder and Principal, Reimagine Advisors
• Beckham Thomas, CEO, Trnsact
• Kaitlin Thompson, New Product Development & Sales Enablement Specialist, Siemens Financial Services, Inc.
• Motofumi Tohda, CLFP, Vice President / Information Systems, Active, Tokyo Century (USA) Inc.
More Information: For more information and to register for the 2023 Innovation Roundtables, please visit www.elfaonline.org/events.
About ELFA
The Equipment Leasing and Finance Association (ELFA) is the trade association that represents companies in the $1 trillion equipment finance sector, which includes financial services companies and manufacturers engaged in financing capital goods. ELFA members are the driving force behind the growth in the commercial equipment finance market and contribute to capital formation in the U.S. and abroad. Its 575 members include independent and captive leasing and finance companies, banks, financial services corporations, broker/packagers and investment banks, as well as manufacturers and service providers. ELFA has been equipping business for success for more than 60 years. For more information, please visit www.elfaonline.org.
### Press Release ############################
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Mixed Breed
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Adopt-a-dog
Pierogi
ID #52456
Female
2 Years Old
42 lbs.
Adoption fee: $150.00
Pierogi may not actually be a cheesy, potato-y treat, but she is an absolute delight. This scrumptious girl is goofy, cuddly, and full of curiosity, and she's looking for a home that can help her decompress, build a routine, and build her confidence so she can focus on her life's work: snuggling with her loved ones.
Pierogi is a sensitive soul who is looking for a quiet, child-free environment and lots of time with her people. She is a bit of a bulldozer when she gets overexcited but is slowly acquiring manners in her foster home: she's really good at sit-stay and is working on a few other baseline behaviors to keep her from getting overstimulated. She would really benefit from a home that can continue building on the training that she's been getting with her foster parents. Fortunately, she's a smartie-pants that loves to learn, play, and explore, so a committed adopter will have plenty of options to keep her brain focused.
Philadelphia PAWS
Old City Adoption Center
100 N. 2nd Street (at Arch)
Philadelphia PA 19106
215-238-9901
adoption@phillypaws.org
https://phillypaws.org/
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ELFA 34th Annual National Funding Conference
Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, March 14 -16
Full information to register, view participants, funding sources attending, brochure, details:
https://www.elfaonline.org/events/2023/national-funding-conference/
https://cvdata.elfaonline.org/cvweb/cgi-bin/documentdll.dll/view?DOCUMENTNUM=3504
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This Day in American History
1600 – Originally, it was the Muslim countries who were taking slaves as their religion would not allow a person to be sold into slavery who was a Muslim. Opening up the United States was
a boom to the industry, as it was slavery and not gold or any major agriculture item that was being brought back to Europe. By the late seventeenth century, the African slave trade was a relatively large-scale business enterprise, largely in the hands of the Dutch until the 1660s. It was continued by the English, with New Englanders especially active after the Royal Africa Trade Company lost its monopoly in 1696. In the trade, a ship sailed from New England with rum and other goods for the Slave Coast. The slaves were then carried, under the most miserable conditions, to the West Indies or to the colonial South, where they were exchanged for sugar, molasses, and tobacco for the North. During this period, Virginia planters relied more on white indentured servants from Europe than on slaves from Africa. There were 6000 indentured servants in Virginia in 1681, compared with 2000 slaves. Some indentured servants came voluntarily, signing papers for five or more years, at the end of which time they would receive some clothing and perhaps a parcel of land. They often then became tenant farmers. Criminals, vagrants, and debtors were sent involuntarily to the New World, usually for a term of service of seven years. And others, children and adults, were victims of kidnapping. They were sold to shipmasters who in turn sold them into servitude in America. Many debtor servants caused trouble in the colonies. As a result, the end of the seventeenth century saw a steady growth in the slave trade.
1730 - Joseph Hewes’ (d. 1779) birthday at Princeton, NJ. Hewes moved to North Carolina at the age of 30 and won over the people of the colony. Hewes was elected to the North Carolina legislature in 1763, only three years after he moved to the colony, and he was re-elected numerous times. By 1773, the majority of North Carolina was in favor of independence and they elected him to become a representative to the Continental Congress in 1774, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/signers/hewes.htm
http://www.colonialhall.com/hewes/hewes.asp
1737 - Birthday of John Hancock (d. 1793), Braintree, MA. American patriot and statesman, first signer of the Declaration of Independence and one of the richest men in the country at the time. He had a lot to lose if the revolution were to fail. Because of his conspicuous signature on the Declaration, Hancock's name has become part of the American language, referring to any handwritten signature, as in “Put your John Hancock on that.”
http://www.johnhancock.org/
http://www.colonialhall.com/hancock/hancock.asp
1775 – The Georgia Colony adopts a revised version of the Continental Association which mandates a non-importation policy and a trade embargo against Britain to force a repeal of the Coercive Acts of 1774.
1780 - The coldest day of the coldest month of record in the northeastern U.S. A British Army thermometer in New York City registered a reading of 16 degrees below zero. During that infamous hard winter, the harbor was frozen solid for five weeks, and the port was cut off from sea supply.
1789 - Georgetown College was founded by Father John Carroll, 54, as the first Catholic college in the United States. The school is in Washington, DC. Its name today is Georgetown University.
http://www.georgetown.edu/
1793 – The first aid society, Humane Society of Philadelphia, organized
1812 – A 7.8 earthquake rattled New Madrid, Missouri
1845 – US Congress decided all national elections would be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. The law was signed by Pres. John Tyler.
1849 - Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to receive an medical degree in the US. The native of Bristol, England was awarded her degree by the Geneva Medical Institution of Geneva, NY, now known as Hobart College.
1849 – A Patent was granted for an envelope-making machine
1855 - The first bridge over the Mississippi River opened in what is now Minneapolis, a crossing made today by the Hennepin Avenue bridge.
1855 – John Moses Browning (d. 1926) was born in Ogden, UT. His father, who was among the thousands of Mormon pioneers in the mass exodus from Nauvoo, IL, established a gunsmith shop in Ogden in 1852. Browning was a Firearms designer who developed many varieties of military and civilian firearms, cartridges, and gun mechanisms, many of which are still in use around the world. Browning's most successful designs include the M1911 pistol, the Browning Hi Power pistol, the Browning .50 caliber machine gun, the Browning automatic rifle, and the Browning Auto-5 semi-automatic shotgun.
1863 - Confederate General John Bell Hood is officially removed as commander of the Army of Tennessee. He had requested the removal a few weeks before. The action closed a sad chapter in the history of the Army of Tennessee. A close personal friend of President Jefferson Davis and a Kentucky native, Hood attended West Point and graduated in 1853. He served in the frontier army until the outbreak of the Civil War. Hood resigned his commission and became a colonel commanding the 4th Texas Infantry. Hood's unit was sent to the Army of Northern Virginia, where it fought during the Peninsular Campaign of 1862. Hood, now a brigadier general, built a reputation as an aggressive field commander. He distinguished himself during the Seven Days' battle in June, and was given command of a division. His counterattack at Antietam in September may have saved Robert E. Lee's army from total destruction. After being severely wounded at Gettysburg in July 1863, Hood was transferred to the Army of Tennessee. He was soon wounded again, losing a leg at Chickamauga in September. Hood was promoted to corps commander for the Atlanta campaign of 1864, and was elevated to commander of the army upon the removal of Joseph Johnston in July. Over the next five months, Hood presided over the near destruction of that great Confederate army. He unsuccessfully attacked General William T. Sherman's army three times near Atlanta, relinquished the city after a month-long siege. He then took his army back to Tennessee in the fall to draw Sherman away from the deep South. Sherman dispatched part of his army to Tennessee, and Hood lost two disastrous battles at Franklin and Nashville in November and December 1864.
There were about 65,000 soldiers in the Army of Tennessee when Hood assumed command in July. On January 1, a generous assessment would count 18,000 men in the army. The Confederate Army of Tennessee was no longer a viable fighting force.
http://www.civilwarhome.com/hoodbio.htm
http://ngeorgia.com/people/hood.html
1870 - US Soldiers deliberately massacred the wrong camp of Indians. Declaring he did not care whether it was the rebellious band of Indians he had been searching for, Colonel Eugene Baker ordered his men to attack a sleeping camp of peaceful Blackfeet along the Marias River in northern Montana. The previous fall, Malcolm Clarke, an influential Montana rancher, had accused a Blackfeet warrior named Owl Child of stealing some of his horses; he punished the proud brave with a brutal whipping. In retribution, Owl Child and several allies murdered Clarke and his son at their home near Helena, and then fled north to join a band of rebellious Blackfeet under the leadership of Mountain Chief. Outraged and frightened, Montanans demanded that Owl Child and his followers be punished, and the government responded by ordering the forces garrisoned under Major Eugene Baker at Fort Ellis (near modern-day Bozeman, Montana) to strike back. Strengthening his cavalry units with two infantry groups from Fort Shaw near Great Falls, Baker led his troops out into sub-zero winter weather and headed north in search of Mountain Chief's band. Soldiers later reported that Baker drank a great deal throughout the march. On January 22, Baker discovered an Indian village along the Marias River, and, postponing his attack until the following morning, spent the evening drinking heavily. At daybreak on the morning of January 23, 1870, Baker ordered his men to surround the camp in preparation for attack. As the darkness faded, Baker's scout, Joe Kipp, recognized that the painted designs on the buffalo-skin lodges were those of a peaceful band of Blackfeet led by Heavy Runner. Mountain Chief and Owl Child, Kipp quickly realized, must have gotten wind of the approaching soldiers and moved their winter camp elsewhere. Kipp rushed to tell Baker that they had the wrong Indians, but Baker reportedly replied, "That makes no difference, one band or another of them; they are all Piegans [Blackfeet] and we will attack them." Baker then ordered a sergeant to shoot Kipp if he tried to warn the sleeping camp of Blackfeet and gave the command to attack. Baker's soldiers began blindly firing into the village, catching the peaceful Indians utterly unaware and defenseless. By the time the brutal attack was over, Baker and his men had, by the best estimate, murdered 37 men, 90 women, and 50 children. Knocking down lodges with frightened survivors inside, the soldiers set them on fire, burnt some of the Blackfeet alive, and then burned the band's meager supplies of food for the winter. Baker initially captured about 140 women and children as prisoners to take back to Fort Ellis, but when he discovered many were ill with smallpox, he abandoned them to face the deadly winter without food or shelter. When word of the Baker Massacre (now known as the Marias Massacre) reached the east, many Americans were outraged. One angry congressman denounced Baker, saying "civilization shudders at horrors like this." Baker's superiors, however, supported his actions, as did the people of Montana, with one journalist calling Baker's critics "namby-pamby, sniffling old maid sentimentalists." Neither Baker nor his men faced a court martial or any other disciplinary actions. However, the public outrage over the massacre did derail the growing movement to transfer control of Indian affairs from the Department of Interior to the War Department. President Ulysses S. Grant decreed that henceforth all Indian agents would be civilians rather than soldiers.
1889 - Dr. Daniel Hale Williams established Provident Hospital in Chicago
1898 – Actor Randolph Scott (d. 1987) was born in Orange County, VA. His career spanned from 1928 to 1962. As a leading man for all but the first three years of his cinematic career, Scott appeared in a variety of genres; however, his most enduring image is that of the tall-in-the-saddle Western hero. Out of his more than 100 film appearances over 60 were in Westerns; thus, "of all the major stars whose name was associated with the Western, Scott most closely identified with it."
1907 - Charles Curtis, of Kansas, began his term serving in the United States Senate, making him the first American Indian to become a United States Senator. In March of 1929, he resigned to become President Herbert Hoover's Vice President.
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=C001008
http://www.africanpubs.com/nativepubs/Apps/bios/0143CurtisCharles.asp
1909 – RMS Republic, a passenger ship of the White Star Line that built Titanic, became the first ship to use the CQD distress signal after colliding with another ship, SS Florida, off the Massachusetts coastline, an event that killed six people. The Republic sank the next day.
1910 – Jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt's (d. 1953) birthday in Belgium. Reinhardt is often regarded as one of the greatest guitar players of all time; he was the first important European jazz musician who made major contributions to the development of the guitar genre.
http://www.hotclub.co.uk/
http://www.classicjazzguitar.com/artists/artists_page.jsp?artist=26
1913 - Joe Hill's song "Mr. Block" published in the "Industrial Worker."
anarchist
http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/~matt/choir/hill.html
http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~trent/ochs/lyrics/joe-hill.html
http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/parton/2/mrblock.html
1919 - Birthday of Ernie Kovacs (d. 1962), early television pioneer and great comedian, in Trenton, NJ. With his wife Edie Adams, he had both a morning and then one of the first late night television shows, smoking a large cigar that his wife later made even more famous. I remember as a teenager the superimposing of Ernie being very small, looking down his wife's well-endowed evening gown. This was very new and shocking on TV. He had a pet gorilla who was more a clown with
antics. He died in a bizarre car accident in Beverly Hills with his wife in a separate car in the lead, his slipped on the wet pavement and slammed at 25 miles an hour into a telephone pole, where the leadsman had left the bottom rung to climb. It went through the driver's door, killing him instantly.
http://users.rcn.com/man
http://broadcastpioneers.tripod.com/kyw/kovacs.html aben/kovacs.html
http://www.erniekovacs.com/
1930 - Birthday of poet and playwright Sir Derek Walcott (d. 2017), born in St. Lucia, in the Caribbean. Walcott won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1992. Walcott's family descended from slaves in the West Indies, and the legacy of slavery is a common theme in his work. Both his parents were schoolteachers and encouraged a love of reading in their three children. When Walcott's father died, his mother raised the family on her own. Walcott knew early on he wanted to be a writer. His first book of poems was published when he was only 18. He continued writing and began teaching as well. Deeply interested in theater as well as poetry, he received a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1957, which allowed him to study with a prominent director in New York for two years. In New York, Walcott founded the Trinidad Theater Workshop. A prolific poet, Walcott published “In a Green Night: Poems 1948-1960” in 1962, “Selected Poems” in 1964, “The Castaway” in 1965, and “The Gulf” in 1969. His lush style explores multicultural tensions and questions of identity. Meanwhile, he continued his work in the theater, with plays like “Ti-Jean and His Brothers” (produced in 1958), “Dream on Monkey Mountain” (produced 1967), and “Pantomime” (produced 1978). He wrote more than 30 plays while continuing to publish poetry collections regularly. His book-length poem “Omeros,” published in 1990, evokes Homer's Odyssey in the environment of the Caribbean. Walcott was the first Caribbean writer to win the Nobel Prize.
http://www.nobel.se/literature/laureates/1992/
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/walcott.htm
http://www.sinnewe.info/
1930 - George Washington Birthplace National Monument, Westmoreland County, Virginia was established. Originally settled by John Washington, Washington’s great-grandfather, George Washington was born here on February 22, 1732. He lived here until age three, returning later as a teenager. The Wakefield National Memorial Association was formed in 1923 to restore the property. In 1930, the grounds were authorized as a U.S. National Monument and, in 1931, the Wakefield Association received a grant from John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to acquire and transfer a total of 394 acres of land to the Federal government.
1933 - The 20th Amendment was ratified, fixing the date of the presidential inauguration at the current January 20 instead of the previous March 4. It also specified that were the president-elect to die before taking office, the vice president-elect would succeed to the presidency. In addition, it set January 3 as the official opening date of Congress each year.
1933 – Actress, singer, dancer Chita Rivera was born Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero in Washington, DC. She is the first Hispanic woman and the first Latino-American to receive a Kennedy Center Honors award (December 2002). She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009.
1936 – Green Bay packers guard and kicker Jerry Kramer was born in Jordan, MT. During the Lombardi era, Kramer and Fuzzy Thurston led the famed Breen Bay Sweep that ripped huge yardage year after year, becoming the staple of the Packers’ offense in those years. Kramer also threw the block in the famous Ice Bowl, the 1967 NFL Championship game against the Dallas Cowboys that allowed QB Bart Starr to sneak over the winning TD in the Pack’s 17-14 win. Although he is a member of the NFL’s 50th Anniversary Team, he is the only member not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
1941 - Charles A. Lindbergh, a national hero since his 1927 nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic, testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on the Lend-Lease policy and suggests that the United States negotiate a neutrality pact with Hitler. In March 1932, Lindbergh made headlines again, but this time because of the kidnapping of his two-year-old son. The baby was later found dead, and the man convicted of the crime, Bruno Hauptmann, was executed. Many historians believe the real murderer was Lindbergh's sister, who had a history of mental disorder and violence, plus she was living in the house. To flee unwanted publicity, Lindbergh and his wife, Anne Morrow, daughter of U.S. ambassador Dwight Morrow, moved to Europe. During the mid-1930s, Lindbergh became familiar with German advances in aviation and warned his U.S. counterparts of Germany's growing air superiority. But Lindbergh also became enamored of much of the German national "revitalization" he encountered, and allowed himself to be decorated by Hitler's government, which drew tremendous criticism back home. Upon Lindbergh's return to the States, he agitated for neutrality with Germany, and testified before Congress in opposition to the Lend-Lease policy, which offered cash and military aid to countries friendly to the United States in their war effort against the Axis powers. His public denunciation of "the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt Administration" as instigators of American intervention in the war, as well as comments that smacked of anti-Semitism, lost him the support of other isolationists. When, in 1941, President Roosevelt denounced Lindbergh publicly, the aviator resigned from the Air Corps Reserve. He eventually contributed to the war effort, though, flying 50 combat missions over the Pacific. His participation in the war, along with his promotion to brigadier general of the Air Force Reserve in 1954 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a popular Pulitzer Prize-winning book, “The Spirit of St. Louis,” and a movie based on his exploits all worked to redeem him in the public's eyes.
1941 - Artie Shaw records “Moonglow/Dancing in the Dark” (Victor 27405/27335). In the band were Johnny Guarnieri, Jack Jenney, Billy Butterfield and Ray Conniff on trombone.
1941 – Ground-breaking for NACA (now NASA) Lewis Research Center
1943 - The New Tribes Mission was incorporated in Los Angeles by founder Paul W. Fleming. NTM works today primarily in missionary aviation, Bible translation, church planting and the production and distribution of Christian literature.
http://www.ntm.org/
1943 - Duke Ellington Band plays first Carnegie Hall concert, introduces “Black, Brown, and Beige.”
1943 - Pioneering rhythm-and-blues artist Louis Jordan topped the Billboard r-and-b chart with "What's the Use of Getting Sober." It was the first of his 18 Number-One singles. Artists such as Chuck Berry and Ray Charles credited Jordan as a major influence.
1943 - FOSS, JOSEPH JACOB, Medal of Honor.
Rank and organization: Captain, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, Marine Fighting Squadron 121, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing. Place and date: Over Guadalcanal, 9 October to 19 November 1942, 15 and 23 January 1943. Entered service at: South Dakota. Born: 17 April 1915, Sioux Falls, S. Dakota. Citation: For outstanding heroism and courage above and beyond the call of duty as executive officer of Marine Fighting Squadron 121, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, at Guadalcanal. Engaging in almost daily combat with the enemy from 9 October to 19 November 1942, Capt. Foss personally shot down 23 Japanese planes and damaged others so severely that their destruction was extremely probable. In addition, during this period, he successfully led a large number of escort missions, skillfully covering reconnaissance, bombing, and photographic planes as well as surface craft. On 15 January 1943, he added 3 more enemy planes to his already brilliant successes for a record of aerial combat achievement unsurpassed in this war. Boldly searching out an approaching enemy force on 25 January, Capt. Foss led his 8 F-4F Marine planes and 4 Army P-38′s into action and, undaunted by tremendously superior numbers, intercepted and struck with such force that 4 Japanese fighters were shot down and the bombers were turned back without releasing a single bomb. His remarkable flying skill, inspiring leadership, and indomitable fighting spirit were distinctive factors in the defense of strategic American positions on Guadalcanal. In 1959, he was appointed as the first Commissioner of the new American Football League.
1943 – Mount Austen on Guadalcanal was taken from the Japanese.
1944 – There are now about 50,000 Allied troops concentrated in the Anzio beachhead. General Lucas commands. German resistance is light but the Allied forces advance slowly. Meanwhile, German Luftwaffe General Albert Kesselring believes it is possible to maintain the Gustav Line defenses at the same time as containing the Anzio landings. The commander of the German 10th Army, von Vietinghoff favors a withdrawal from the southern defensive line. The German High Command allots German reserves from France, northern Italy and the Balkans as well as the German 14th Army headquarters to organize defenses around Anzio. Within a week a total of 8 German divisions are concentrated in the area.
1944 - The Detroit Red Wings set an NHL record for consecutive goals scored when they defeated the New York Rangers, 15-0.
1945 - ORESKO, NICHOLAS, Medal of Honor.
Rank and organization: Master Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company C, 302d Infantry, 94th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Tettington, Germany, 23 January 1945. Entered service at: Bayonne, N.J. Birth: Bayonne, N.J. G.O. No.: 95, 30 October 1945. Citation: M/Sgt. Oresko was a platoon leader with Company C, in an attack against strong enemy positions. Deadly automatic fire from the flanks pinned down his unit. Realizing that a machine gun in a nearby bunker must be eliminated, he swiftly worked ahead alone, braving bullets which struck about him, until close enough to throw a grenade into the German position. He rushed the bunker and, with pointblank rifle fire, killed all the hostile occupants who survived the grenade blast. Another machine gun opened up on him, knocking him down and seriously wounding him in the hip. Refusing to withdraw from the battle, he placed himself at the head of his platoon to continue the assault. As withering machine gun and rifle fire swept the area, he struck out alone in advance of his men to a second bunker. With a grenade, he crippled the dug-in machine gun defending this position and then wiped out the troops manning it with his rifle, completing his second self-imposed, 1-man attack. Although weak from loss of blood, he refused to be evacuated until assured the mission was successfully accomplished. Through quick thinking, indomitable courage, and unswerving devotion to the attack in the face of bitter resistance and while wounded, M /Sgt. Oresko killed 12 Germans, prevented a delay in the assault, and made it possible for Company C to obtain its objective with minimum casualties.
1948 - John Huston's "Treasure of Sierra Madre" starring Humphrey Bogart opens
http://www.filmsite.org/trea.html
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/TheTreasureoftheSierraMadre-1021979/
http://www.moviegoods.com/movie_product.asp?master_movie_id=14163
1951 – Top Hits
“Tennessee Waltz” - Patti Page
“The Thing” - Phil Harris
“A Bushel and a Peck” - Perry Como & Betty Hutton
“The Shot Gun Boogie” - Tennessee Ernie Ford
1951 – Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger was born in Dennison, TX. He was hailed as a national hero when he successfully executed an emergency water landing of US Air Flight 1549 in the Hudson River off Manhattan, after the aircraft was disabled by striking a flock of geese during its initial climb out of LaGuardia Airport on January 15, 2009. All of the 155 passengers and crew aboard the aircraft survived.
1953 – In the NFL, the National and American Conferences became the Eastern and Western Conferences while the Dallas Texans became the Baltimore Colts.
1955 - The U.S. Presbyterian Church votes to accept women as ministers.
1956 - After being turned down by several other labels, Cincinnati's King label agrees to release James Brown and the Famous Flames' "Please, Please, Please."
1957 - American inventor Walter F. Morrison sold the rights to his flying disc to the Wham-O toy company, which later renamed it the "Frisbee."
1959 – Top Hits
“Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” - The Platters
“My Happiness” - Connie Francis
“Donna” - Ritchie Valens
“Billy Bayou” - Jim Reeves
1960 – The bathyscaphe USS Trieste broke a depth record by descending to 35,797 feet, nearly 7 miles, in the Pacific Ocean.
1961 – The Supreme Court ruled that cities and states have the right to censor films
1962 - Jackie Robinson became the first black ballplayer to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Robinson broke baseball's color line in 1947 and played for the Brooklyn Dodgers through 1956. Also elected was the Indians’ flame-throwing right-hander, Bob Feller.
1963 - A 20-year-old college dropout from Port Arthur, TX named Janis Joplin begins hitchhiking to San Francisco in order to become a singer, along with her friend Chet Helms.
1964 - The Twenty-Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution was ratified. Poll taxes and other taxes were eliminated as a prerequisite for voting in all federal elections. Payment of the tax stood as a potent prerequisite and sometimes outright barrier, to voting in national elections. And, for the Southern Democrats who designed and helped pass the tax in a number of Southern states during the 1880s and 1890s, this was precisely the point: the poll tax was a blunt tool for barring poverty-stricken African-Americans and whites from participating in the electoral process. As such, the tax was also a means for stemming the rise of the Populist Party, which had used a racially mixed coalition of poor and lower class voters to gain a place on the national stage. Attempts to roll back the poll tax were generally blocked in the Senate. However, in 1949, Senator Spessard L. Holland of Florida took up the cause of killing the tax forever via a constitutional amendment. When the Senate finally passed the Twenty-Fourth Amendment in 1962, the poll tax remained in effect in five Southern states: Virginia, Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama. After 1964, it was constitutionally legal in none.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/jan23.html
1964 – Actress Mariska Hargitay was born in Santa Monica, the daughter of actress Jayne Mansfield. She has been the long-time lead in the “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit” TV series as Detective Olivia Benson that has earned her multiple awards and nominations, including an Emmy and a Golden Globe.
1965 - “The King Family” premiered on television, the
ABC musical variety show featuring the singing and playing of the King sisters and other descendants of William King Driggs, who organized the family musical group in the 1930s. Including spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, some three dozen members of the King family have appeared on camera at one time.
1965 - Petula Clark becomes the first British female to hit the top of the American charts, with her smash "Downtown."
1967 - Top Hits
“I'm a Believer” - The Monkees
“Tell It Like It Is” - Aaron Neville
“Georgy Girl” - The Seekers
“There Goes My Everything” - Jack Greene
1968 - North Korea seized the USS Pueblo in the Sea of Japan, claiming the ship was on a spy mission. The crew was held for 11 months. The vessel was confiscated. The Pueblo incident began when the Navy intelligence ship was seized off the coast of North Korea by North Korean patrol boats. It was claimed that the Pueblo had been caught within North Korean waters. Its crew of 83 was subjected to harsh treatment until their release. Accompanying the crew when they were released--on Dec 22, 1968--was the body of Seaman Duane D. Hodges, the only crewman killed. The Pueblo incident was a blow to the Johnson administration's credibility, as the president seemed powerless to free the captured crew and ship. Combined with the public's perception--in the wake of the Tet Offensive--that the Vietnam War was being lost, the Pueblo incident resulted in a serious faltering of Johnson's popularity with the American people. The crewmen's reports about their horrific treatment at the hands of the North Koreans during their 11 months in captivity further incensed American citizens, many of whom believed that Johnson should have taken more aggressive action to free the captive Americans. They were primarily after actual cipher machine and this was the main plan in the capture of the Pueblo. With it, they could read all secret communication by the US military.
1970 - During the trial of the "Chicago Seven" accused of starting a riot during the 1968 Democratic National Convention, witness Judy Collins is denied the right to sing a relevant song during her testimony.
1971 - In Prospect Creek Camp, Alaska, the lowest temperature ever recorded in the United States was reported when the thermometer fell to minus 80 degrees.
1971 – UCLA lost to Notre Dame in basketball, then reeled off 88 games in a row, only to be defeated by Notre Dame again.
1973 - President Nixon announces that Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho, the chief North Vietnamese negotiator, have initiated a peace agreement in Paris "to end the war and bring peace with honor in Vietnam and Southeast Asia", preliminary signed on January 22 and official agreement signed on January 27. Kissinger and Tho had been conducting secret negotiations since 1969. After the South Vietnamese had blunted the massive North Vietnamese invasion launched in the spring of 1972, Kissinger and the North Vietnamese had finally made some progress on reaching a negotiated end to the war. However, a recalcitrant South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu had inserted several demands into to the negotiations that caused the North Vietnamese negotiators to walk out of the talks with Kissinger on December 13. President Nixon issued an ultimatum to Hanoi to send its representatives back to the conference table within 72 hours "or else." The North Vietnamese rejected Nixon's demand and the president ordered Operation Linebacker II, a full-scale air campaign against the Hanoi area. This operation was the most concentrated air offensive of the war. During the 11 days of the attack, 700 B-52 sorties and more than 1,000 fighter-bomber sorties dropped roughly 20,000 tons of bombs, mostly over the densely populated area between Hanoi and Haiphong. On December 28, after 11 days of intensive bombing, the North Vietnamese agreed to return to the talks. When the negotiators met again in early January, they quickly worked out a settlement.
1973 - Tony Orlando and Dawn's "Knock Three Times" hits #1
1973 - Neil Young interrupted a concert in New York to announce that the US had accepted a ceasefire in Vietnam. The audience was reported to have hugged and kissed for 10 minutes.
1974 - The movie "The Exorcist," based on William Peter Blatty's novel, opened with Mike Oldfield's "Tubular Bells" playing over the movie's credits. The song was awarded a gold record.
1974 – TV actress Tiffani Amber Theissen was born in Long Beach, CA.
1975 – Top Hits
“Mandy” - Barry Manilow
“Please Mr. Postman” - Carpenters
“Laughter in the Rain” - Neil Sedaka
“Kentucky Gambler” - Merle Haggard
1975 - "Barney Miller" premiered on television, about a New York precinct captain starred Hal Linden as Captain Barney Miller. The 12th Precinct gang included Barbara Barrie as Miller's wife, Abe Vigoda as Detective Phil Fish, Max Gail as Sergeant Stan Wojciehowicz, Gregory Sierra as Sergeant Chano Amenguale, Jack Soo as Sergeant Nick Yemana, Ron Glass as Detective Ron Harris and a host of others. It was one of my favorite television shows
http://timvp.com/bmiller.html
1977 - When Carole King's landmark album, "Tapestry," hit its 302nd week on the album charts, it became the longest-running album to hit the charts in history. It would eventually be eclipsed, no pun intended, by Pink Floyd's “Dark Side of the Moon.”
1982 - CBS broadcasts “The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception,” charging General William Westmoreland oversaw the intentional underestimation of enemy forces to improve the perception of how things were going. Westmoreland filed a libel suit, which he subsequently lost.
http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/U/htmlU/uncountedene/uncountedene.htm
http://www.sfsu.edu/~avitv/avcatalog/88419.htm
1983 - "The A-Team" began its run on television, full of action and drama, starring, Mr. T. Wearing a ton of gold jewelry, he played the not so mild-mannered Sergeant Bosco B.A. Baracus, under the command of George Peppard as John Hannibal Smith
http://www.timstvshowcase.com
http://www.ateamresource.net/review.asp?menuid=47
http://www.dollsandtoysaustralia.com/ateam.html
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Academy/6677/
1983 – Top Hits
“Down Under” - Men at Work
“The Girl is Mine” - Michael Jackson /Paul McCartney
“Dirty Laundry” - Don Henley
“(Lost His Love) On Our Last Date” - Emmylou Harris
1983 - Miami linebacker A.J. Duhe has three interceptions, including one he returns for a 35-yard touchdown, as the Dolphins defeat the Jets 14-0 in the AFC Championship Game.
1986 - The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducts its very first class of musicians: Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, James Brown, Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Sam Cooke, and the Everly Brothers.
1988 - For the first time ever, a bowler named Bob Benoit rolled a 300 game on television to win a professional tournament. He won the Quaker State Open in Grand Prairie, TX, and earned a $100,000 bonus.
1991 - Policeman's Videotaped Murder Leads to Killers' Convictions in Texas. Darrell Lunsford, a county constable in Garrison, Texas, is killed after pulling over a traffic violator. His murder was remarkable because it was captured on a camera set up in Lunsford's patrol vehicle. The videotape evidence led to the conviction of the three men who beat, kicked, and stabbed the officer to death along the East Texas highway. Lunsford pulled over a vehicle with Maine license plates and turned on the video camera installed on his front dashboard. He appeared to have asked the three men in the car to open the trunk. However, when the men got out of the car they tackled Lunsford and stabbed him in the neck. The men took his gun, badge, and wallet and drove off in their car. Later that night, Reynaldo Villarreal was picked up by officers as he was walking a few miles from the murder site. His brother, Baldemar, and another man, Jesse Zambrano, were also arrested a short time later. At the trial of the three men, the jury watched the videotape and all three were convicted. The videotaped murder of Lunsford has ushered in a new era. Video cameras have become ubiquitous in police cars, and can be a potent law-enforcement tool.
1991 – Top Hits
“Love Will Never Do (Without You)” - Janet Jackson
“The First Time” - Surface
“Sensitivity” - Ralph Tresvant
“Unanswered Prayers” - Garth Brooks
1991 – “Seinfeld” debuted on NBC-TV.
1993 - New York Newsday reported Oregon Senator Bob Packwood sexually harassed 23 women
1994 – Cowboys’ QB Bernie Kosar became the second quarterback to throw TD passes in AFC and NFC Championship games
1997 - Madeleine Korbel Albright, born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, was sworn in as Secretary of State, the first woman to hold this position. She served as Ambassador to the United Nations during the first administration of President Clinton. While she was raised a Catholic, during her term she learned she was the child of Jewish parents killed by the Nazi's and hidden and raised as a Catholic.
1998 - Pope John Paul II condemned U.S. embargo against Cuba
2002 - "American Taliban" John Walker Lindh returned to the US in FBI custody.
2002 - Reporter Daniel Pearl was kidnapped in Pakistan and subsequently murdered
2003 - Final communication between Earth and Pioneer 10 spacecraft.
2011 - Google awarded its outgoing CEO Eric Schmidt $100 million
2013 - Without offering an explanation, Tina Turner revealed that she was giving up her US citizenship to become a citizen of Switzerland. Her reasons were probably was not tax related, as Switzerland itself is a high tax environment for its citizens.
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