1998: The U.S. Congress releases the report of special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, which details President Bill Clinton’s alleged sexual misconduct and accuses the president of perjury and obstruction of justice.
2001: Terrorists hijack airplanes and deliberately crash them into the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing thousands.
It’s almost over, but it WAS a happy burtday! Thanks!!!
See if you can pick out the NEVERMIND Birthday theme:
Slept in.
Took a nap.
Played on the computer.
Went shopping.
Took another nap.
Opened birthday presents.
Went out to dinner.
Had a couple glasses of wine with my dinner—should help me sleep.
Anyone need some advice on stress management?
Sept 11–ya that’s tough!! OUch–how do you compensate for that? Suggestions?
Going with the actual date/year:
The biggest? Mt. St. Helens erupted. When I was little, my mother told me that it was the heavens fighting to keep me. Plumes went to 9 miles.
Disregarding the year, I share my birthday with Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frank Oz, and Miles Davis. 585 BC held the first predicted solar eclipse. In '28, Amelia Earhart was the first woman to fly the Atlantic Ocean. It’s Argentina’s National Day. I’ve been told it’s celebrated as Buddha’s birthday in Hong Kong.
John Wayne died the day I was born (June 11, 1979).
Famous people also born June 11 include Ben Jonson (1572), Richard Strauss (1864), Jeannette Rankin (1880), Jacques Cousteau (1910), Vince Lombardi (1913), Nelson Mandela (1918), Gene Wilder (1935), and Joe Montana (1956).
(Incidentally, Rico’s link, when listing the works Jonson is best known for, mentions The Devil is an Ass and Sejanus, but not Volpone! :eek: )
Stuff that happened, gleaned from the various sites people have linked to –
1770: Captain James Cook runs into the Great Barrier Reef
1950: George Wallace attempts to prevent black students from attending the University of Alabama
1963: Buddhist monk Quang Duc immolates himself
1966: Janis Joplin makes her first onstage appearance
1982: “E.T.” opens
1987: Margaret Thatcher elected to a third consecutive term
2001: Timothy McVeigh executed
1923: In Munich, armed policeman and troops loyal to Germany’s democratic government crush the Beer Hall putsch (revolt), Hitler’s first attempt at seizing control of the German government.
1938: In Germany, Nazis set synagogues on fire, smash the windows of Jewish shops, and arrest thousands of Jews in a single night that comes to be known as Kristallnacht, or the Night of Broken Glass.
1965: New York and much of the northeast coast of North America suffer the largest power failure in history, leaving thirty million people in the dark.
**1989: German citizens begin to demolish the Berlin Wall, which had separated East Germany from West Germany since 1961. **
My 21st birthday - I was in Texas when it happened, but it was especially significant to me because I grew up in Germany (U.S. Army brat) and had the incredible opportunity to visit East Berlin in 1986. I didn’t think it would come down in my lifetime.
“April 28, 1982, a date that will go down in the United State’s history books in infamy. That date commemorates the United State’s second civil war.”
For the full story, go here: http://www.otherside.net/us2war.htm
I remember there was a total eclipse on February 25, 1979, my 9th birthday. It was raining that day so all we got to see was the sky getting dark (I think we were going to view it through pinhole cameras, but for obvious reasons couldn’t). Instead we all gathered in the school lunchroom and watched the coverage on TV.