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  • #61
    November 15:

    1867 - First stock ticker debuts in New York
    1891 - Erwin Rommel is born
    Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. - Ben Franklin
    Iain Banks missed deadline due to Civ | The eyes are the groin of the head. - Dwight Schrute.
    One more turn .... One more turn .... | WWTSD

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    • #62
      Originally posted by Lord Avalon
      1891 - Erwin Rommel is born
      HB Erwin!

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      • #63
        Happy 100th Birthday, Oklahoma!

        Oklahoma enters the Union
        Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory collectively enter the United States as Oklahoma, the 46th state.


        Oklahoma, with a name derived from the Choctaw Indian words okla, meaning "people," and humma, meaning "red," has a history of human occupation dating back 15,000 years. The first Europeans to visit the region were Spanish explorers in the 16th century, and in the 18th century the Spanish and French struggled for control of the territory. The United States acquired Oklahoma from France in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase.

        After the War of 1812, the U.S. government decided to remove Indian tribes from the settled eastern lands of the United States and move them west to the unsettled lands of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. In 1828, Congress reserved Oklahoma for Indians and in 1834 formally ceded it to five southeastern tribes as Indian Territory. Many Cherokees refused to abandon their homes east of the Mississippi, and so the U.S. Army moved them west in a forced march known as the "Trail of Tears." The uprooted tribes joined Plains Indians that had long occupied the area, and Indian nations with fixed boundaries and separate governments were established in the region.

        During the American Civil War, most tribes in Indian Territory supported the South. With the defeat of the Confederacy in 1865, the territory was placed under U.S. military rule. White cattlemen and settlers began to covet the virgin ranges of Oklahoma, and after the arrival of the railroad in the 1870s, illegal white incursion into Indian Territory flourished. Most of these "Boomers" were expelled, but pressure continued until the federal government agreed in 1889 to open two million acres in central Oklahoma for white settlement. At noon on April 22, 1889, a pistol shot signaled the opening of the new land, and tens of thousands of people rushed to stake claims. Those who had already made illegal entry to beat the starting gun were called "Sooners," hence Oklahoma's state nickname. The following year, the region was divided into Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory.

        In 1907, Congress decided to admit Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory into the Union as a single state, with all Indians in the state becoming U.S. citizens. Representatives of the two territories drafted a constitution, and on September 17, 1907, it was approved by voters of the two territories. On November 16, Oklahoma was welcomed into the United States by President Theodore Roosevelt.

        Oklahoma initially prospered as an agricultural state, but the drought years of the 1930s made the state part of the Dust Bowl. During the Depression, poor tenant farmers known as "Okies" were forced to travel west seeking better opportunities. In the 1940s, prosperity returned to Oklahoma, and oil production brought a major economic boom in the 1970s.

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        • #64
          2002 - SARS was first diagnosed on this day in Guangdod, China
          You just wasted six ... no, seven ... seconds of your life reading this sentence.

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          • #65
            Originally posted by Zkribbler
            Happy 100th Birthday, Oklahoma!
            That's an increadible sad story
            "post reported"Winston, on the barricades for freedom of speech
            "I don't like laws all over the world. Doesn't mean I am going to do anything but post about it."Jon Miller

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            • #66
              Many Cherokees refused to abandon their homes east of the Mississippi, and so the U.S. Army moved them west in a forced march known as the "Trail of Tears." The uprooted tribes joined Plains Indians that had long occupied the area, and Indian nations with fixed boundaries and separate governments were established in the region.
              I find it ironic and shameful that our US Congress condemns the Ottoman genocide of the Armenians in 1915 for the exact same thing we did to our native American citizens back in the 19th Century.

              Comment


              • #67
                November 19, 1863 -- The Gettysburg Address:

                Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

                Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.

                But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate -- we can not consecrate -- we can not hallow -- this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
                Analysists have pointed out how Lincoln paralleled U.S. history up to that point with the life of Christ.

                An immaculate birth: "...a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."

                A resurrection: "...a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."
                Last edited by Zkribbler; November 19, 2007, 16:43.

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                • #68
                  emaculate?

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by Kuciwalker
                    emaculate?
                    fixed.

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Nov. 21:

                      Happy 313th Birthday, Voltaire!

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                      • #71
                        Happy 148th birthday, Billy the Kid!

                        November 23, 1859
                        Billy the Kid born


                        The infamous Western outlaw known as "Billy the Kid" is born in a poor Irish neighborhood on New York City's East Side. Before he was shot dead at age 21, Billy reputedly killed 27 people in the American West.

                        Billy the Kid called himself William H. Bonney, but his original name was probably Henry McCarty. Bonney was his mother Catherine's maiden name, and William was the first name of his mother's longtime companion--William Antrin--who acted as Billy's father after his biological father disappeared. Around 1865, Billy and his brother traveled west to Indiana with their mother and Antrin, and by 1870 the group was in Wichita, Kansas. They soon moved farther west, down the cattle trails, and in 1873 a legally married Catherine and William Antrin appeared on record in New Mexico territory. In 1874, Billy's mother died of lung cancer in Silver City.

                        Billy soon left his brother and stepfather and took off into the New Mexico sagebrush. He worked as a ranch hand and in 1876 supposedly killed his first men, a group of reservation Apache Indians, in the Guadalupe Mountains. According to legend, it was not long before Billy killed another man, a blacksmith in Camp Grant, Arizona. Billy the Kid, as people began calling him, next found work as a rancher and bodyguard for John Tunstall, a English-born rancher who operated out of Lincoln, New Mexico. When members of a rival cattle gang killed Tunstall, in 1878, Billy became involved in the so-called Lincoln County War.

                        Enraged at Tunstall's murder, Billy became a leader of a vigilante posse of "regulators" sent to arrest the killers. No arrests were made, however. Two of the murderers were shot dead by Billy's posse, and a worsening blood feud soon escalated into all-out warfare. After Billy's gang shot dead Lincoln Sheriff Bill Brady, who had sanctioned Tunstall's murder, Billy's enemies conspired with the territorial authorities to do away with the regulators.

                        In July 1878, the rival gang surrounded the house where Billy and his gang were staying just outside of town. The siege stretched on for five days, and a U.S. Army squadron from nearby Fort Stanton was called in. Still, Billy and his gang refused to surrender. Suddenly, the regulators made a mass escape, and Billy and several of the other regulators miraculously managed to shoot their way out of town.

                        After more than two years on the run, Billy was arrested by Lincoln Sheriff Pat Garrett, a man Billy had previously befriended before Garrett became a lawman. In April 1881, Billy was found guilty of the murder of Sheriff Brady and was sentenced to hang. On April 28, two weeks before his scheduled execution, Billy wrested a gun from one of his jailers and shot him and another deputy dead in a daring escape that received considerable national attention.

                        On the night of July 14, 1881, Garrett finally tracked Billy down at a ranch near Fort Sumner, New Mexico. He gained access to the house where Billy was visiting a girlfriend and then surprised him in the dark. Before the outlaw could offer resistance, Garret fired a bullet into his chest. Billy the Kid was dead at age 21.

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                        • #72
                          November 24, 1859 Origin of Species is published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection

                          1922: Irish author and nationalist executed

                          1963: Jack Ruby kills Lee Harvey Oswald

                          1971: Hijacker parachutes into thunderstorm

                          1807: Mohawk Chief Joseph Brant dies

                          1849: Father of the tractor is born

                          1900: First gasoline powered Pierce Arrow gets a test-drive

                          1863: : Battle of Lookout Mountain

                          1947: Joe McCarthy has the "Hollywood 10" cited for contempt of Congress

                          1932: The FBI Crime Lab opens its doors for business

                          1999: Ferry sinks in Yellow Sea, killing hundreds

                          1868: Scott Joplin born

                          1951: Gigi opens, starring Audrey Hepburn

                          1978: Letterman's first Tonight Show appearance

                          1784: Zachary Taylor is born

                          1918: Yugoslav National Council expresses concerns about post-war boundaries


                          From Wiki:
                          380 - Theodosius I makes his adventus, or formal entry, into Constantinople.
                          1190 - Isabella of Jerusalem marries Conrad of Montferrat at Acre, making him de jure King.
                          1639 - Jeremiah Horrocks observes the transit of Venus.
                          1642 - Abel Tasman becomes the first European to discover the island Van Diemen's Land (later renamed Tasmania).
                          1859 - Charles Darwin publishes The Origin of Species.
                          1863 - American Civil War: Battle of Lookout Mountain - Near Chattanooga, Tennessee, Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant capture Lookout Mountain and begin to break the Confederate siege of the city led by General Braxton Bragg.
                          1898 - The International Conference of Rome for the Social Defense Against Anarchists opens.
                          1904 - The first successful caterpillar track is made.
                          1917 - Nine police officers and one civilian are killed when a bomb explodes at the Milwaukee, Wisconsin police headquarters building.
                          1922 - Author and Irish Republican Army member Robert Erskine Childers is executed by an Irish Free State firing squad for illegally carrying a revolver.
                          1932 - In Washington, D.C., the FBI Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory (better known as the FBI Crime Lab) officially opens.
                          1935 - The Senegalese Socialist Party holds its second congress.
                          1941 - World War II: The United States grants Lend-Lease to the Free French.
                          1943 - World War II: The USS Liscome Bay is torpedoed near Tarawa and sinks with nearly 650 men killed.
                          1944 - World War II: Bombing of Tokyo - The first bombing raid against the Japanese capital from the east and by land is carried out by 88 American aircraft.
                          1947 - Red Scare: After the so-called Hollywood 10 refuse to co-operate with the House Un-American Activities Committee concerning allegations of Communist influence in the movie industry, the United States House of Representatives votes 346 to 17 to approve citations of contempt of Congress against them.
                          1947 - Robert Schuman becomes Prime Minister of France.
                          1960 - Wilt Chamberlain pulls down 55 rebounds in one game, setting an NBA record.
                          1962 - The West Berlin branch of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany forms a separate party, the Socialist Unity Party of West Berlin.
                          1963 - Vietnam War: Newly sworn-in US President Lyndon B. Johnson confirms that the United States intends to continue supporting South Vietnam both militarily and economically.
                          1965 - Joseph Désiré Mobutu seizes power in the Congo and becomes President; he goes on to rule the country (which he renames Zaire in 1971) for over 30 years, until being overthrown by rebels in 1997.
                          1966 - A Bulgarian plane with 82 people on board crashes near Bratislava, Slovakia.
                          1966 - New York City experiences the smoggiest day in the city's history.
                          1969 - Apollo program: The Apollo 12 command module splashes down safely in the Pacific Ocean, ending the second manned mission to the Moon.
                          1971 - During a severe thunderstorm over Washington state, a hijacker calling himself Dan Cooper (AKA D.B. Cooper) parachutes from a Northwest Orient Airlines plane with US$200,000 in ransom money - neither he nor the money have ever been found.
                          1992 - In the People's Republic of China, a China Southern Airlines domestic flight crashes, killing all 141 people on-board.
                          1993 - In Liverpool, 11-year-olds Robert Thompson and Jon Venables are convicted of the murder of 2-year-old James Bulger.
                          1998 - America Online announces it will acquire Netscape Communications in a stock-for-stock transaction worth US$4.2 billion.
                          2005 - Conservative leader Stephen Harper, the leader of the Official Opposition in the Canadian Parliament, introduces a motion of no confidence, which NDP leader Jack Layton seconds. The motion is passed on November 28 leading to the dissolution of the 38th Canadian Parliament.
                          Last edited by Dinner; November 24, 2007, 12:52.
                          Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                          • #73
                            how can a man father a tractor? what did his wife look like?

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                            • #74
                              Originally posted by Dis
                              how can a man father a tractor? what did his wife look like?
                              He did not say it was a man
                              Statistical anomaly.
                              The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.

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                              • #75
                                Nov 26

                                1862 - Alice in Wonderland manuscript sent as a Christmas present to Alice Liddell.

                                1922 - Charles M Schulz born.

                                Archaeologists enter tomb of King Tut.



                                1941 - FDR signs a bill officially designating the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day.
                                Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. - Ben Franklin
                                Iain Banks missed deadline due to Civ | The eyes are the groin of the head. - Dwight Schrute.
                                One more turn .... One more turn .... | WWTSD

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