Wednesday, November 23, 2022
Today's Leasing News Headlines
Happy Thanksgiving: Both ELFA Monthly
and 3rd Quarter Up!
New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Best-in-Class Sales Technology/Vendor Sales Managers
Companies with Three or More CLFP Members
Total Membership today: 1,229 CLFP’s
Academy for Certified Lease & Finance Professionals
December, 2022 & January, 2023 - Updated
Two-Thirds of Small Businesses on eBay
Reach Three or More Countries
By Delaney Sexton, Coleman Report Contributing Editor
Fernando Croce Streaming Thanksgiving:
Broadway Danny Rose, For Your Consideration
Four Brokers Nobody's Fool, Two Lovers
Spaniel (unknown type)
Costa Mesa, California Adopt-a-Dog
Vince Lombardi Famous Quotes
(1913-1970) US football coach
News Briefs ----
US banks spent $1 billion on ransomware
payments in 2021, Treasury says
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown pardons 45,000 people
with marijuana possession convictions
Renters now need to work six hours more
to pay rent than before the pandemic
This Is What China’s Renewed War
on Covid Looks Like
Inside the Saudi Strategy
to Keep the World Hooked on Oil
You May Have Missed ---
A federal grant for a new Oakland A’s waterfront ballpark
won't help the City of Oakland
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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Happy Thanksgiving: Both ELFA Monthly
and 3rd Quarter Up!
The Equipment Leasing and Finance Associations Monthly Leasing and Finance Index was up $11.3 billion month to month as well as up year-to-year of $10.2 billion
ELFA President and CEO Ralph Petta said, “The equipment finance industry demonstrates its typical resilient nature, producing an increase in October new business volume despite months of interest rate hikes brought on by the Fed’s efforts to control inflation. Despite the spectre of an imminent recession—as many economists predict—equipment finance organizations continue to do what they do best, i.e., help supply the nation’s businesses with productive assets that enable them to survive and thrive.”
Full Press Release:
https://www.elfaonline.org/knowledge-hub/mlfi-25-monthly-leasing-and-finance-index/view-mlfi/monthly-leasing-and-finance-index-october-2022
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New Hires/Promotions in the Leasing Business
and Related Industries
Jason Alves was promoted to Vice President, Private Equity, Wingspire Equipment Finance, Huntington Beach, California. He joined the company June, 2018, as Vice President of Private Equity, promoted June, 2018, Vice President of Private Equity and Healthcare. He joined Blue Street Capital January, 20112 as Account Executive, promoted September, 2013, Vendor Program Manager, Senior Director of Sales.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonalves1/
Michael Burke was hired as specialty Health Finance Representative, Dext Capital, Lake Oswego, Oregon. He is located in Portland, Oregon. Previously, he was Business Solutions Advisor, ADT (July, 2022 - November, 2022); Sales, Luum (July, 2021 - May, 2022); Sales Representative, Cultivera (March, 2021 - July, 2021). Full Bio:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelburkepdx/details/experience/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelburkepdx/
Steve DeCarlo was hired as Executive Director, Leasing Syndication, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Baltimore, Maryland. Previously, he was Managing Director, Syndication, Element Fleet Management (June, 2020 - November, 2022); Senior Vice President, Santander US (April, 2019 - January, 2020); Senior Vice President, GE Capital (July, 2000 - March, 2019); Vice President, Keycorp Leasing (March, 1993 - June, 2000); Senior Auditor, KeyCorp (January, 1985 - February, 1993).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/stevedecarlo/
B.J. Ferneau was promoted to Regional Sales Director, Engs Commercial Finance Company, Itasca, Illinois. He is located in Aurora, Illinois. He joined the company February, 2013, Senior Credit analyst, promoted October, 2013, Vice President, Portfolio Management Group.
Full Bio: https://www.linkedin.com/in/b-j-ferneau-8795b57/details/experience/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/b-j-ferneau-8795b57/
Tonya Single was promoted to Director, Lease Administration/Billing Services, LeasePlan, Alpharetta, Georgia. She joined LeasePlan August, 2001, Director, Lease Administration, promoted June, 2019, Manager, Billing Services; Cash Management, RaceTrac Petroleum (May, 1995 - August, 2001).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/tonya-single-3530203b/
Bryan Thomas was hired as Director Originator, East Region, Wintrust Commercial Finance, Chicago, Illinois. He is located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Previously, he was at PNC, starting June, 2016, Analyst, promoted March, 2018, Senior Associate, promoted April, 2019, Assistant Vice President. He joined PNC as Corporate Banking Intern (June, 2015 - August, 2015).
https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryanthomas42/
Tina Vang was hired as Leasing Consultant, Los Alisos Estates, Garden Grove, California. She is located in Costa Mesa, California. She joined Sovereign Lending Group, Inc., April, 2019, as Post Closer, promoted October, 2020, Post Closing Team Lead; Senior Funder, Partners Capital Group (February, 2018 - March, 2019). Full Bio: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tina-vang-aa426789/details/experience/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/tina-vang-aa426789/
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Leasing and Finance Industry Help Wanted
Excellent Compensation/Marketing Support/Work
[headlines]
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Companies with Three or More CLFP Members
Total Membership today 1,229 CLFP’s
Account |
# CLFPs |
First American Equipment Finance, a City National Bank Company |
139 |
U.S. Bank Equipment Finance |
54 |
DLL |
52 |
Ascentium Capital LLC |
45 |
Key Equipment Finance |
45 |
Amur Equipment Finance |
35 |
The Huntington National Bank |
35 |
Oakmont Capital Holdings, LLC |
30 |
Financial Pacific Leasing, Inc., an Umpqua Bank Company |
29 |
Arvest Equipment Finance |
28 |
AP Equipment Financing |
24 |
Stearns Bank NA-Equipment Finance Division |
21 |
North Mill Equipment Finance |
19 |
Channel |
18 |
Stryker |
17 |
KLC Financial, Inc. |
16 |
Orion First Financial LLC |
15 |
ECS Financial Services, Inc. |
14 |
Odessa |
14 |
Northland Capital Financial Services, LLC |
13 |
Ivory Consulting Corporation |
12 |
1st Source Bank |
11 |
Beacon Funding Corporation |
11 |
Fleet Advantage, LLC |
11 |
Navitas Credit Corp. |
10 |
Cadence Bank |
9 |
Canon Financial Services, Inc. |
9 |
Great American Insurance |
9 |
Lease Corporation of America |
9 |
Solifi |
9 |
Alliance Funding Group |
8 |
BMO |
8 |
LTi Technology Solutions |
8 |
Quality Leasing Co., Inc. |
8 |
Wintrust Specialty Finance |
8 |
Truist |
7 |
Commercial Equipment Finance, Inc. |
6 |
Crossroads Equipment Lease & Finance LLC |
6 |
GreatAmerica Financial Services |
6 |
CoreTech Leasing, Inc. |
5 |
Nexseer Capital |
5 |
Tokyo Century (USA) Inc. |
5 |
Univest Capital, Inc. |
5 |
Cisco Systems Capital Corporation |
4 |
Falcon Equipment Finance, a division of Falcon National Bank |
4 |
First Foundation Bank |
4 |
FIS |
4 |
Hanmi Bank |
4 |
UniFi Equipment Finance, Inc. |
4 |
Vision Financial Group, Inc. |
4 |
APEX Commercial Capital Corp. |
3 |
BankFinancial, NA |
3 |
Commerce Bank |
3 |
Commercial Capital Company, LLC |
3 |
Dext Capital |
3 |
ENGS Commercial Finance Co. |
3 |
First Citizens Bank |
3 |
First Commonwealth Bank |
3 |
LEAF Commercial Capital Inc. |
3 |
MAZO Capital Solutions |
3 |
NCMIC Finance Corporation |
3 |
Northteq, Inc. |
3 |
Regents Capital Corporation |
3 |
Tamarack Technology, Inc. |
3 |
Taycor Financial |
3 |
TD Equipment Finance, Inc. |
3 |
The Alta Group LLC |
3 |
Thermo Fisher Financial Services |
3 |
Transport Enterprise Leasing LLC |
3 |
Western Equipment Finance |
3 |
Time to Renew!
“This year we are holding a firm cutoff of December 31st for renewals as we began in September. The fee to reinstate is $100 after that date. We are currently at 67% renewed, and not much time left…”
Reid Raykovich, CLFP
Chief Executive Officer
Certified Lease & Finance Professional Foundation
(206) 535-6281
reid@CLFPFoundation.org
www.CLFPFoundation.org
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Academy for Certified Lease & Finance Professionals
December, 2022 & January, 2023 - Updated
The Academy for Lease and Finance Professionals (ALFP) is a three-day event designed to fully prepare an individual to sit for the CLFP exam assuming the attendee has already self-studied. A trend has begun in having virtual online sessions.
During the first two days, all of the required sections of the CLFP exam are covered in-depth. On the third day, the exam is offered but is not mandatory and may be taken on another day.
Students are strongly advised to have read and studied The Certified Lease & Finance Professionals' Handbook prior to attending the class in order to ensure success.
Taycor In-Person Private
December 7 – 8, 2022
2022 Private Virtual ALFP Hosted by DLL
December 13 – 14. 2022
Ascentium Capital Private Online ALFP
January 4- 6, 2023
Professional Handbook for Taking the Test in 2022
Eighth Edition:
https://clfpfoundation.org/
(Note: for taking test in 2023 Ninth Edition, available.)
About Academy
https://clfpfoundation.org/academy-for-lease-and-finance-professionals
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Two-Thirds of Small Businesses on eBay
Reach Three or More Countries
By Delaney Sexton, Coleman Report Contributing Editor
“Small businesses are the backbone of eBay, and our platform exists to power their success at every stage of their journeys. eBay sellers bring incredibly diverse inventory to our marketplace — united by a shared passion and expertise for the communities they serve,” says Jordan Sweetnam, Senior Vice President, Global Markets at eBay.
Earlier this month, eBay published its 2022 Small Business Report highlighting the relationship between small businesses and eBay’s platform.
Here are the facts:
• Almost a third of the business owners surveyed said that their business would not be able to exist without eBay while 40% said that their business relies on eBay a lot.
• Women surveyed were 13% more likely to say that eBay is essential to their business and 5% more likely to say that eBay played a significant role in starting their business.
• 94% of sellers described eBay as being accessible to all people at least moderately well.
• In the last year, over two-thirds of those surveyed reported selling to more than three countries besides their own, and a third reported selling to more than six countries.
• Almost 60% of small businesses surveyed say that eBay’s community of sellers is necessary or essential to their business.
• 83% said that eBay helped them turn their passion into a business.
• Since 2020, the Up & Running Grants program launched by eBay has assisted 150 small business sellers across the U.S. and committed $1.5 million in funding.
“Our sellers dream big and work hard to realize their personal goals. What they do is truly inspirational,” says Jamie Iannone, President and CEO. “We partner with them along their journey, helping to propel their success and creating economic opportunity for all.”
Source:
2022 eBay Small Business Report
Coleman Report
28081 Marguerite Pkwy.
#4525, Mission Viejo, CA 92690
bob@colemanreport.com
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Watch at Home
by Fernando Croce, Leasing News Movie Reviewer
Thanksgiving Edition
With Thanksgiving just around the corner, let’s seek some choice cinematic offerings to go with our turkey and gravy and pumpkin pie. So check out these seasonal classics, and have a safe and happy holiday.
Broadway Danny Rose (1984): Though “Hannah and Her Sisters” is the Woody Allen movie viewers usually remember on Thanksgiving, this affectionate, underrated comedy deserves just as much attention. Allen plays the eponymous protagonist, a small-time talent agent whose colorful (and often talent-challenged) clients include magicians, musicians and comics. With a Turkey Day meal prepared, Danny Rose must instead run around New York with Tina (Mia Farrow), the brassy girlfriend of a washed-up lounge singer named Lou Canova (Nick Apollo Forte). Chased by gangsters and angry wives, the two of them dash for their lives and, maybe, fall in love. Departing from his more serious and bitter films, Allen’s look at the seedy yet optimistic low end of showbiz offers plenty of laughs, a brisk pace, and even unsentimental pathos.
Nobody's Fool (1994): Paul Newman is at his most appealing as small-town rascal Donald "Sully" Sullivan in this tart and tender drama. Past 60 yet still blissfully avoiding most of his responsibilities, he muddles through life in a snowy New York burg by coasting on his charm, engaging in mild feuds with friends and doing the occasional construction job. Things take an unexpected turn, however, when his son (Dylan Walsh) and his family comes home for Thanksgiving with Sully's ex-wife (Elizabeth Wilson), and the old man recognizes an opportunity to prove his worth. Directed by sly humanist Robert Benton ("Places in the Heart"), the film is short on plot but long on delightful characterization, humor and grace. The excellent supporting cast includes Jessica Tandy, Bruce Willis, and Melanie Griffith.
Four Brothers (2005): For a more action-packed Turkey Day, check out this solid urban thriller from Oscar-nominated director John Singleton (“Boyz n the Hood”). The siblings of the title are a quartet of Detroit tough guys who were adopted by the same kindly woman, Evelyn (Fionnula Flanagan). There’s hockey player Bobby (Mark Wahlberg), military veteran Angel (Tyrese Gibson), musician Jack (Garrett Hedlund), and family man (Andre Benjamin). When Evelyn is killed in what appears to be a random crime, the four men band together to investigate the matter, as the often brutal trail points to local crime boss Victor Sweet (Chitewel Ejiofor). An unlikely blend of violence and sentimentality, the movie is an enjoyable revenge tale that includes an incongruously spiritual moment in the middle of the protagonists’ Thanksgiving dinner.
For Your Consideration (2006): Mockumentary specialist Christopher Guest (“Waiting for Guffman”) takes satirical aim at showbiz dealings and awards in this ensemble lampoon, anchored by a terrific performance by Catherine O’Hara. She plays Marilyn Hack, a seasoned character actress who’s starring in a low-budget family drama directed by the eccentric Jay Berman (Guest). When rumors start floating about the production being on the short list for Oscar nominations, everybody begins to obsess over the awards. (So much so that the original title, “Home for Purim,” is changed to “Home for Thanksgiving” to appease the studios.) A bittersweet snapshot of vanity and desperation, Guest’s film is a knowing ode to gentle oddballs in a cutthroat business, with a cast that also includes Eugene Levy, Harry Shearer and Jennifer Coolidge.
Two Lovers (2009): Something of a specialist in gangster sagas (“The Yards,” “We Own the Night”), James Gray made a surprising but heartening shift to affecting, intimate romances, beginning with this marvelous drama set from Thanksgiving to New Year’s Eve.. Leonard (Joaquin Phoenix) is an aspiring photographer whose unsteady mind following a troubled relationship lands him back at his parents’ house in New York. His family wants him to meet a nice local girl (Vinessa Shaw), but he is more interested in Michelle (Gwyneth Paltrow), a party girl who gives him a taste of Manhattan glamour but, as he soon finds out, has deep problems of her own. Trading underworld guns for raw emotions, Gray and his actors beautifully depict the rapture as well as the desperation that love can cause.
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Spaniel (unknown type)
Costa Mesa, California Adopt-a-Dog
Logan
ID: 18754990
Male
Two Years Old
White
Purebred
Neutered
Meet Logan! This two-year-old spaniel mix came from the Hesperia animal shelter in November, and he is ready to make someone's family very, very happy. If you're looking for a fun dog, you found him with Logan: he's active, energetic, friendly, and affectionate. He will need a home with lots of space to run around, and maybe some other doggie friends to play with. If you are interested in Logan, please submit an application at http://ahome4everrescue.org/adoption-form/
Come meet our dogs Saturdays and Sundays at PetSmart in Costa Mesa from 11:30-2:30. All A Home 4 Ever Rescue dogs receive a wellness exam by our veterinarian and are up to date with vaccinations. They are spayed or neutered and microchipped before they go to their adoptive families. If you would like more information please email the adoption Director muellenbergerin@gmail.com
A Home 4 Ever
Costa Mesa, Ca. 92637
Erin Muellenberg
muellenbergerin@gmail.com
http://ahome4everrescue.org
Adoption application
http://ahome4everrescue.org/adoption-form/
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Vince Lombardi Famous Quotes
(1913-1970) US football coach
If winning isn't everything, why do they keep score?
The difference between a successful person and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of knowledge, but rather in a lack of will.
Gentleman, this is a football.
We didn't lose the game; we just ran out of time.
Fatigue makes cowards of us all.
The harder you work, the harder it is to surrender.
If you can't accept losing, you can't win.
Winning is a habit. Unfortunately, so is losing.
The quality of a person's life is in direct proportion to their commitment excellence, regardless of their chosen field of endeavor. -
All right Mister, let me tell you what winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, give more than anyone else.
The spirit, the will to win, and the will to excel are the things that endure. These qualities are so much more important than the events that occur.
Individual commitment to a group effort -- that is what makes a team work a company work, a society work, a civilization work.
Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing.
--Vince Lombardi
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This Day in History
1718 - English pirate Edward Teach, known as "Blackbeard", was captured off the Outer Banks of North Carolina near Ocracoke, taken to England and hanged.
1749 - Birthday of Edward Rutledge (d. 1800) at Charleston, SC. He was the youngest signer of the Declaration of Independence, governor of South Carolina. Ironically he was against independence, but was a recognized leader at the first Continental Congress and was the deciding vote approving South Carolina’s entry to the Union.
http://www.edwardrutledge.com/
http://www.colonialhall.com/rutledge/rutledge.php
1765 – The people of Frederick County, MD refused to pay England's Stamp tax.
1783 – Annapolis became the capital of the US and would remain so until June, 1784.
1785 - John Hancock was elected President of the Continental Congress for the second time.
1804 - Birthday of Franklin Pierce (d. 1869) at Hillsboro, NH. Fourteenth President of the US whose term of office was Mar 4, 1853 - Mar 3, 1857. He was not nominated until the 49th ballot at the Democratic Party convention in 1852, and he was refused his party's nomination for a second term in 1856. (Lower half of: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/nov23.html)
1835 - Henry Burdon of Troy, NY, received a patent for a horseshoe manufacturing machine. His machine produced a completed horseshoe from a rod of iron that was fed into it. It produced shoes more rapidly and uniformly than the rational method of hand production on a forge.
1848 – The Female Medical Education Society formed in Boston.
1852 - Just past midnight, a sharp jolt causes Lake Merced in San Francisco to drop 30' (9m)
http://www.outsidelands.org/lake-merced.html
http://www.sfgenealogy.com/sf/history/hgoe31.htm
http://www.lakemerced.org/homepage.html
1857 - Birthday of Katharine Coman (d. 1915) in Newark, OH. U.S. economic historian whose “Industrial History of the United States” (1905) was widely used as a textbook and her “Economic Beginnings of the Far West” (1912) was a major historical work. She researched her books by going into the field and interviewing personally while observing things for herself. She was professor of political economy and history at Wellesley College where she lived with Katharine Lee Bates for many years.
1859 - Birthday of legendary outlaw Henry McCarty (d. 1881) in New York City. He was better known as William H. Bonney a.k.a. “Billy the Kid.” He was a ruthless killer, a failure at everything legal, escaping from jail at age 21 while under sentenceto be hanged. Recaptured at Stinking Springs, NM, and returned to jail, he again escaped, only to be shot through the heart by pursuing Lincoln County Sheriff Pat Garrett at Fort Sumner, NM, during the night of July 14, 1881. His last words, answered by two shots, reportedly were “Who is there?”
1860 - Abraham Lincoln had inherited not only a country divided, but one in great financial difficulty. On this day, the Clearing House handed out its first loan, issuing $7.375 million worth of certificates to the nation's ailing banks. Abraham Lincoln was elected President on February 27. The US population was 31,443,321; 448,070 free blacks and 3,953,760 slaves. The Union was 33 states, 18 of them free and 15 slave. At the time, the economy was not in very good shape. One of Lincoln’s moves to get the economy going was helping the ailing banks.
1863 - The historic Battle of Chattanooga began. Following the defeat of the Union Army at the Battle of Chickamauga in September, the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen. Bragg besieged Union Gen. Rosecrans and his men by occupying key high terrain around Chattanooga. Maj. Gen. Grant was given command of Union forces in the West and significant reinforcements began to arrive with him in Chattanooga from Mississippi and the East. After opening a supply line (the "Cracker Line") to feed his starving men and animals, Grant's army fought off a Confederate counterattack at Wauhatchie on October 28–29, 1863. On November 23, the Army of the Cumberland under Maj. Gen. Thomas advanced from the fortifications around Chattanooga to seize the minor high ground at Orchard Knob while elements of the Union Army of Tennessee under Gen. Sherman maneuvered to launch a surprise attack against Bragg's right flank on Missionary Ridge. On November 24, Eastern Theater troops under Maj. Gen. Hooker defeated the Confederates at Lookout Mountain and began a movement toward Bragg's left flank at Rossville. On November 25, Sherman's attack on Bragg's right flank made little progress. Hoping to distract Bragg's attention, Grant authorized Thomas's army to advance in the center of his line to the base of Missionary Ridge. A combination of misunderstood orders and the pressure of the tactical situation caused Thomas's men to surge to the top of Missionary Ridge, routing the Army of Tennessee, which retreated to Dalton, GA, fighting off the Union pursuit successfully at Ringgold Gap. Bragg's defeat eliminated the last significant Confederate control of Tennessee and opened the door to an invasion of the Deep South, leading to Sherman's Atlanta Campaign and March to the Sea of 1864.
http://www2.cr.nps.gov/abpp/battles/tn024.htm
http://www.aotc.net/Chattanooga.htm
http://www.collectorsnet.com/cwtimes/chattano.htm
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/nov23.html
1876 - William Magear Tweed, known as Boss, was delivered to authorities in New York City after being captured in Spain. Tammany Hall was the Democratic Party political machine that played a major role in the politics of 19th century New York City and State. At the height of his influence, Tweed was the third-largest landowner in NYC, a director of the Erie Railroad, the Tenth National Bank, and the New-York Printing Company, as well as proprietor of the Metropolitan Hotel. His control over political patronage in New York City was through Tammany, as was his ability to ensure the loyalty of voters through jobs he could create and dispense on city-related projects. According to Tweed biographer Kenneth D. Ackerman: “It's hard not to admire the skill behind Tweed's system ... The Tweed ring at its height was an engineering marvel, strong and solid, strategically deployed to control key power points: the courts, the legislature, the treasury and the ballot box. Its frauds had grandeur of scale and an elegance of structure: money-laundering, profit sharing and organization.” Tweed was convicted for stealing an amount estimated by an aldermen's committee in 1877 at between $25 million and $45 million from NYC taxpayers through corruption, although later estimates ranged as high as $200 million. Unable to make bail, he escaped from jail once, but was returned to custody. He died in the Ludlow Street Jail.
1876 – Those three college football powers, Columbia, Princeton, and Harvard, formed the Intercollegiate Football Association.
1878 – Fleet Admiral Ernest King (d. 1956) was born in Lorain, OH. He was Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. fleet who reportedly designed the United States' winning strategy in World War II. Promoted to Vice Admiral, he insisted that his pilots be trained for night operations. In January 1941, King was made commander of the Atlantic Fleet and, after Pearl Harbor, he was given the post of Commander in Chief of the US Fleet. King developed a reputation for being abrasive and argumentative. As a member of the Joint Chief of Staffs, he often clashed with General George Marshall. King opposed plans to land the US Army in North Africa. He thought the most important area of concern was the Pacific War. Moreover, he thought that the US Navy should play the decisive role in this as long as it was given adequate resources. King, General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander of the Southwest Pacific Area, and Chester Nimitz, Commander in Chief of the US Pacific Fleet, decided that their first objective should be to establish and protect a line of communications across the South Pacific to Australia. This resulted in the battles of Coral Sea and Midway, where the Japanese Navy lost all four of her carriers. King insisted on launching the Guadalcanal campaign although MacArthur claimed that the US Army was not ready yet for a major offensive. MacArthur also disagreed with invasion of the Solomon Islands. There was also conflict over King's view that American forces should bypass the Philippines. King also opposed Russian involvement in the Pacific War. He also objected to the idea that the Royal Navy should be moved to Pacific after gaining control of the Atlantic. In December 1944, King, along with William Leahy and Chester Nimitz, was given the five-star rank of Fleet Admiral.
1887 – Actor Boris Karloff (d. 1969) was born William Henry Pratt in London, England. He is best known for his roles in horror films and especially for his portrayal of Frankenstein in “Frankenstein” (1931), “Bride of Frankenstein” (1935), and “Son of Frankenstein” (1939), which resulted in his immense popularity.
1888 – Harpo Marx (d. 1964) was born Adolph Marx in the Upper East Side of Manhattan. In January 1910, Harpo joined two of his brothers, Julius (later "Groucho") and Milton (later "Gummo"), to form "The Three Nightingales," later changed to simply "The Marx Brothers." Multiple stories, most unsubstantiated, exist to explain Harpo's evolution as the "silent" character in the brothers' act. In his memoir, Groucho wrote that Harpo simply wasn't very good at memorizing dialog, and thus was ideal for the role of the "dunce who couldn't speak," a common character in vaudeville acts of the time.
1889 - Louis Glas invented and this day installed a coin-operated phonograph player in the Palais Royale, San Francisco. There were many such machines made, generally called “coin graphs.” The first widely successful “jukebox” manufacturer was the Rudolph Wurlitzer Company of North Tonawanda, NY. Its most popular model was made of curved plastic tubes containing a fluid with a low boiling point. Small heaters kept the fluid bubbling. Wurlitzer sold 56,246 of the Model 1015 in 1946 at $750 each. In reality, the juke boxes never became as widely distributed until the 1950's with the invention of the 45rpm record.
http://www.knowmadz.org/library/ref/soundcap.htm
1897 - Jazz pianist Willie “the Lion” Smith (d. 1973) birthday, born William Henry Joseph Bonaparte Bertholoff Smith, Goshen, NY
http://www.redhotjazz.com/thelion.html
1897 – Ransom Eli Olds of Lansing, Michigan, is issued a U.S. patent for his "motor carriage," a gasoline-powered vehicle that he constructed the year before. He claimed to have built his first steam car as early as 1894 The modern assembly line and its basic concept is credited to Olds, who used it to build the first mass-produced automobile, the Oldsmobile Curved Dash, beginning in 1901
1897 – Ruth Etting (d. 1978) was born in David City, NE. One of the most popular U.S. singers from the 1920's through most of the 1940's, she had more than 60 big hits. Best known today for her gangster connections because of the movie about her life “Love Me or Leave Me,” the fictionalized story of her life with Doris Day as Etting.
1903 - Singer Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, appearing in "Rigoletto."
1909 – The Wright Brothers formed a million-dollar corporation to manufacture airplanes.
1912 - Trombonist Tyree Glenn (d. 1974) was born in Corsicana, Texas.
http://www.harlem.org/people/glenn.html
http://www.jazzmanrecords.com/tyreeglenn.html
1914 - Emmett Littleton Ashford (d. 1980), was born at Los Angeles, CA. He was the first black to umpire a Major League Baseball game. Ashford began his pro career calling games in the minors in 1951 and went to the Majors in 1966. He was noted for his flamboyant style when calling strikes and outs, and for his dapper dress which included cuff-links with his uniform.
http://www.tvtome.com/tvtome/servlet/PersonDetail/personid-308006
1925 - Birthday of composer Johnny Mandel (d. 2020), NYC. A Grammy and Oscar-winning composer and arranger of popular songs, film music, and jazz, among the musicians he has worked with are Basie, Sinatra, Peggy Lee, Anita O’Day, Streisand, Tony Bennett, and Shirley Horn. Among his compositions is “Suicide is Painless,” the theme from “M*A*S*H*”
http://www.ascap.com/filmtv/mandel.html
http://www.thegoldenglobes.com/welcome.html?
nominee/mandel_johnny.html
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Johnny%20Mandel
1936 - The illustrated magazine “Life” debuted on this day. “Life” was a weekly American magazine from 1883 to 1972, published initially as a humor and general interest magazine. Time founder Henry Luce bought the magazine in 1936, solely so that he could acquire the rights to its name, then shifted it to a role as a weekly news magazine with a strong emphasis on photojournalism, the first issue of which was today. It was published weekly until 1972, as an intermittent "special" until 1978, and as a monthly from 1978 to 2002.
http://www.otal.umd.edu/~vg/amst205.F97/vj22/history.html
http://www.life.com/Life/covers/1936/cv112336.html
http://www.life.com/Life/aboutlife/lifefaqs01.html
1938 - Bob Hope and Shirley Ross recorded a song for the film, “The Big Broadcast of 1938.” “Thanks for the Memory” became Decca record number 2219. It also became Hope's theme song.
1943 - The US Second Marine Division took control of the Gilbert Islands after fierce fighting on the heavily fortified Tarawa Atoll. In the 76-hour battle, the Marines beat back a “death charge” in which the Japanese ran directly at the American guns. American troops sustained 3,500 killed and wounded. The Japanese suffered 5,000 killed and 17 wounded and captured. The Gilbert Islands are the westernmost of the Polynesians, midway between Australia and Hawaii and today are part of the nation of Kirbati.
1943 - Randolph in Coos County, NH receives 56 inches of snow, a record for the state. Berlin received 55 inches and many other locations over 40 inches
1943 – Philadelphia Phillies owner William D. Cox was permanently banned from baseball by Commissioner Landis for having bet on his own team
1944 - SILK, EDWARD A., Medal of Honor
Rank and organization: First Lieutenant, U.S. Army, Company E, 398th Infantry, 100th Infantry Division. Place and date: Near St. Pravel, France, 23 November 1944. Entered service at: Johnstown, Pa. Born: 8 June 1916, Johnstown, Pa. G.O. No.: 97, 1 November 1945. Citation: 1st Lt. Edward A. Silk commanded the weapons platoon of Company E, 398th Infantry, on 23 November 1944, when the end battalion was assigned the mission of seizing high ground overlooking Moyenmoutier France, prior to an attack on the city itself. His company jumped off in the lead at dawn and by noon had reached the edge of the woods in the vicinity of St. Pravel where scouts saw an enemy sentry standing guard before a farmhouse in a valley below. One squad, engaged in reconnoitering the area, was immediately pinned down by intense machinegun and automatic-weapons fire from within the house. Skillfully deploying his light machinegun section, 1st Lt. Silk answered enemy fire, but when 15 minutes had elapsed with no slackening of resistance, he decided to eliminate the strong point by an l-man attack. Running 100 yards across an open field to the shelter of a low stone wall directly in front of the farmhouse, he fired into the door and windows with his carbine; then, in full view of the enemy, vaulted the wall and dashed 50 yards through a hail of bullets to the left side of the house, where he hurled a grenade through a window, silencing a machinegun and killing 2 gunners. In attempting to move to the right side of the house he drew fire from a second machinegun emplaced in the woodshed. With magnificent courage he rushed this position in the face of direct fire and succeeded in neutralizing the weapon and killing the 2 gunners by throwing grenades into the structure. His supply of grenades was by now exhausted, but undaunted, he dashed back to the side of the farmhouse and began to throw rocks through a window, demanding the surrender of the remaining enemy. Twelve Germans, overcome by his relentless assault and confused by his unorthodox methods, gave up to the lone American. By his gallant willingness to assume the full burden of the attack and the intrepidity with which he carried out his extremely hazardous mission, 1st Lt. Silk enabled his battalion to continue its advance and seize its objective.
1946 - French naval bombardment of Hai Phong Harbor, Vietnam, killed thousands of civilians. This was to lead to the First Indochina war, which eventually dragged the US into the conflict in the late 1950s.
1946 - Top Hits
“Rumors are Flying” - Frank Sinatra
“Ole Buttermilk Sky” - The Kay Kyser Orchestra (vocal: Mike Douglas & The Campus Kids)
“The Whole World is Singing My Song” - The Les Brown Orchestra (vocal: Doris Day)
“Divorce Me C.O.D.” - Merle Travis
1947 - E. L. Sukenik of Jerusalem's Hebrew University first received word of the existence of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The documents, dating between 200 BC and AD 70, had been accidentally discovered the previous winter (1946-47) by two Bedouin shepherds in the vicinity of Qumran.
1948 - Dr. Frank G. Back of New York City patented the Zoom lens, which was first used by NBC television in April of 1947. It was not mass produced until 1959 when it became very popular with usage on a 35mm camera.
http://www.cameraquest.com/ekzoom.htm
1952 - Birthday of Francie Larrieu Smith, Palo Alto, CA. She is, perhaps the greatest runner in U.S. history in a career that spanned four decades. She set 35 American records in distances from 1,000 meters to two miles. During an international career from 1969-92, Larrieu Smith was on 28 national teams and won 21 national titles. She was a member of five Olympic teams, starting in 1972 when she ran the 1,500 meters. She also ran the 1500 at the 1976 Games and was a team member at the same distance in 1980.
1954 - Top Hits
“I Need You Now” - Eddie Fisher
“Mr. Sandman” - The Chordettes
“Teach Me Tonight” - The De Castro Sisters
“More and More” - Webb Pierce
1954 - The Dow Jones Industrial Average finally surpassed its pre-crash high, 25 years after Black Tuesday, when it closed at 382.74.
1962 - Top Hits
“Big Girls Don't Cry” - The 4 Seasons
“Return to Sender” - Elvis Presley
“Next Door to an Angel” - Neil Sedaka
“I've Been Everywhere” - Hank Snow
1963 - "I'm Leaving it up to You" by Dale & Grace topped the charts and stayed there for 2 weeks.
1963 – President John F. Kennedy's body lay in repose in East Room of White House, the day after his assassination in Dallas. President Johnson declared November 25 a national day of mourning.
http://www.multied.com/Sixties/Funeralrites.html
http://www.fiftiesweb.com/kennedy/kennedy-assassination-23.htm
http://www.mdw.army.mil/fs-m01.htm
1963 - First episode of “Dr. Who” premiered on British TV with William Hartnell as the first doctor. Traveling through time and space in the TARDIS (an acronym for Time and Relative Dimensions in Space), the doctor and his companions found themselves in mortal combat with creatures such as the Daleks. “Dr. Who” didn't air in the US until Sept 29, 1975.
1964 - The US Supreme Court refuses to strike the phrase "under God," instituted in 1954, from the Pledge of Allegiance. The phrase was incorporated into the Pledge of Allegiance on June 14, 1954, by a Joint Resolution of Congress amending § 4 of the Flag Code enacted in 1942. Subsequently, there have been multiple challenges not only to this phrase but to the requirement that students recite the pledge.
1966 - Elvis Presley's 22nd film, "Spinout," premieres in Los Angeles. The movie is another box-office success and critical disaster for Elvis.
1967 - AM radio received a blow to its self-esteem when San Francisco KMPX-FM disc jockey Tom Donahue, inventor of "classic rock" and "deep cut" radio, tells Rolling Stone: "Top Forty radio, as we know it today and have known it for the last ten years, is dead, and its rotting corpse is stinking up the airwaves."
1968 - It's the end of an era: Rolling Stone Magazine reported that San Francisco's Family Dog has lost its license to operate out of the Avalon Ballroom, site of the marathon dance concerts featuring the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Moby Grape, Quicksilver Messenger Service and other psychedelic groups.
1970 - Top Hits
“I Think I Love You” - The Partridge Family
“The Tears of a Clown” - Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
“Gypsy Woman” - Brian Hyland
“Fifteen Years Ago” - Conway Twitty
1974 - Billy Swan reached the #1 spot on the singles charts for the first and only time. “I Can Help” was the most popular song in the U.S. for two weeks.
1975 - Minnesota quarterback Fran Tarkenton becomes the NFL's all-time completions leader when he completes his 2,840th pass in the Vikings' 28-13 victory over San Diego. By comparison, through the 2019 season, Drew Brees is the all-time leader with 7,052…and he is still active. Tarkenton is now 15th all-time.
http://images.nfl.com/history/images/1123.jpg
http://www.tarkentonsports.com/
1977 – With their closer, Sparky Lyle, having just won the AL Cy Young Award, the first AL reliever to do so, the New York Yankees signed free agent reliever Goose Gossage to a six-year $2.75 million contract. Gossage had 26 saves and a 1.26 ERA for the Pirates last season. Before the season was over, Gossage would move into the closer’s role while Lyle would be traded to the Texas Rangers in the off-season. The Yanks took the World Series from the Dodgers without having Lyle pitch.
1978 - Top Hits
“MacArthur Park” - Donna Summer
“Double Vision” - Foreigner
“How Much I Feel” - Ambrosia
“Sleeping Single in a Double Bed” - Barbara Mandrell
1981 - President Ronald Reagan signs off on a top secret document, National Security Decision Directive 17 (NSDD-17), which gives the Central Intelligence Agency the power to recruit and support a 500-man force of Nicaraguan rebels to conduct covert actions against the leftist Sandinista regime in Nicaragua. In the years to come, U.S. support of the Contras became a highly charged issue among the American public. Congressional and public criticisms of the program eventually drove the Reagan administration to subvert congressional bans on aid to the Contras. These actions resulted in what came to be known as the Iran-Contra scandal of 1986.
1983 - A 24-hour snowfall record for Duluth, MN was broken with 16.9 inches. 19.7 inches fell during the entire storm, also a record
1984 - Quarterback Doug Flutie of Boston College (my cousin on my mother's side) passed for 472 yards and led the Eagles to a 47-45 upset of the Miami University Hurricanes. Flutie won the game with a desperation “Hail Mary” touchdown pass that end Gerald Phelan caught in the end zone as time ran out. The play is considered among the greatest in college football history and American sports.
1986 - Top Hits
“Human” - Human League
“You Give Love a Bad Name” - Bon Jovi
“Word Up” - Cameo
“You're Still New to Me” - Marie Osmond with Paul Davis
1987 - Box office sales began for the spectacular musical, “The Phantom of The Opera.” Phantom took in a record-setting amount of $920,272 in seventeen hours. The incoming hit from London made a Broadway record in advance sales of over $12 million two months before its grand opening the following January.
1988 - Wayne Gretzky scores his 600th NHL goal. He finished his 20-year NHL career with 1016, including playoffs.
http://www.upperdeck.com/athletes/waynegretzky/profile.aspx
1989 - Low pressure tracking across the Carolinas brought heavy rain to parts of the Southern Atlantic Coast Region for Thanksgiving Day, and blanketed the Middle Atlantic Coast States and southern New England with heavy snow. The storm produced up to nine inches of snow over Long Island, NY, and up to 14 inches over Cape Cod, MA, at Yarmouth. Totals of 4.7 inches at New York City and 6.0 inches at Newark, NJ were records for Thanksgiving Day, the 8.0 inch total at Providence, RI was a record for any given day in November, and the 6.5 inch total at Strasburg, CT was a record for the month of November as a whole.
1991 - "When a Man Loves a Woman" by Michael Bolton topped the charts and stayed there for a week.
1991 - La Crosse, WI set a new record for 24-hour snow with 13 inches. This storm brought the monthly total to 28.2 inches, also a record
1992 - The first smartphone, IBM’s Simon was introduced at COMDEX at Las Vegas.
1992 - Early morning severe thunderstorms spawned two F3 tornadoes in North Carolina resulting in 2 deaths and 59 injuries. This was the last day of the three day outbreak in which 93 tornadoes touched down claiming 25 lives.
1992 - Alta, UT was buried under 45 inches of snow in 24 hours to set an all-time 24 hour record for that location
1994 - Top Hits
“I’ll Make Love To You” - Boyz II Men
“Here Comes The Hotstepper” (From "Ready To Wear") - Ini Kamoze
“On Bended Knee” - Boyz II Men
“Another Night” - Real McCoy
1996 - Actor Woody Harrelson and others clogged traffic for hours on the San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge in a protest on behalf of the Headwaters forest.
1998 - The world's first portable mp3 player goes on sale, despite strenuous objections from the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America). The Diamond Rio PMP300, which cost $200, could play about a dozen songs.
2004 - An outbreak of severe thunderstorms produced reports of 54 tornadoes across portions of Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Alabama. In Texas's Hardin County, one person was killed with three injured when a tornado struck during the afternoon.
2013 - Pop band One Direction hosted 1D Day, a day consisting of a record, 7.5 hour-long socially interactive live-stream on YouTube and Google+ Hangout including live band performances and celebrity guests; the event was an unprecedented use of social media.
2018 - Federal Climate report finds climate change will reduce economy by 10% by 2100 with $141 billion cost from heat-related deaths, $118 billion from sea level rise.
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