Thoughts for the Day

Today in History (August 17th):

1601: Birthdays: French mathematician Pierre de Fermat.

1786: Birthdays: Frontiersman Davy Crockett.

1807: Robert Fulton began the first American steamboat trip between Albany, N.Y., and New York City.

1882: Birthdays: Movie producer Samuel Goldwyn.

1887: Birthdays: Jamaican black nationalist leader Marcus Garvey.

1888: Birthdays: Actor Monty Woolley.

1893: Birthdays: Actor Mae West.

1913: Birthdays: Watergate figure W. Mark Felt, known as Deep Throat.

1915: A hurricane struck Galveston, Texas, killing 275 people.

1920: Birthdays: Actor Maureen O’Hara.

1929: Birthdays: U.S. spy plane aviator Francis Gary Powers.

1930: Birthdays: British poet laureate Ted Hughes.

1932: Birthdays: Nobel literature laureate V.S. Naipaul.

1943: Birthdays: Actor Robert De Niro.

1958: Birthdays: Pop singer Belinda Carlisle.

1960: Birthdays: Actor Sean Penn.

1961: The East German government began building the Berlin Wall.

1978: Three Americans completed the first crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by balloon, landing their helium-filled Double Eagle II near Paris.

1987: Kidnapped U.S. journalist Charles Glass escaped and was rescued after being held hostage for 62 days in Lebanon. Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s former deputy, was found strangled in Berlin’s Spandau Prison. He was 93.

1991: The Lebanese government granted amnesty to former Christian army commander Gen. Michel Aoun and allowed him to leave the French Embassy.

1992: Filmmaker Woody Allen and Mia Farrow split after 12 years together. Allen said he was in love with the actress’s adult daughter, Soon-Yi Previn.

1996: The Reform Party nominated Texas businessman Ross Perot for president.

1998: Addressing the American people, U.S. President Bill Clinton admitted he had a relationship with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky that was not appropriate.

1999: At least 16,000 people were killed and 20,000 more injured when a strong earthquake rocked Turkey.
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2001: Ford Motor Co. announced it would dismiss up to 5,000 of its salaried employees — 10 percent of its managers and engineers.

2004: Eight British men arrested with reconnaissance plans for the New York Stock Exchange and other targets have been charged with conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to use radioactive material, toxic gas, chemicals or explosives.

2005: Reports say three suicide car bombings in the center of Baghdad killed at least 43 people and injured 80 others. Meanwhile, a series of bombs exploded simultaneously across Bangladesh killing at least 115 people. Israeli soldiers and police began moving Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip.

2006: A U.S. District Court judge in Detroit ruled that the National Security Agency wiretapping program was illegal. U.S. President George Bush ordered an appeal. Several U.S. cigarette makers were convicted in a Washington civil racketeering suit of conspiring to deceive the public about the dangers of smoking.

2008: Iran reported it had tested a new rocket capable of carrying a satellite into orbit. At least 160 people were killed in Vietnam by torrential rain-caused flooding in Southeast Asia.

2009: In what prosecutors called the largest identity theft in U.S. history, three suspects were charged with the hacking theft of more than 130 million credit and debit numbers with the data shipped off to servers in California, Illinois and Europe.

2010: A federal court jury in Chicago convicted former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, forced out of office on corruption charges, of making false statements to federal agents, one of 24 counts against him. Jurors were deadlocked on other charges including an accusation he tried to sell U.S. President Barack Obama’s vacated Senate seat to the highest bidder. A suicide bomber set off a device at an Iraqi army recruiting office, killing at least 48 recruits and soldiers and wounding 120 others.

2011: U.S. President Barack Obama said that politics was standing in the way of the United States moving forward and called again on Congress to act quickly on measures that would extend the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits and other legislation typically handled in a bipartisan manner.


Quotes

“All the things I really like to do are either immoral, illegal or fattening.” – Alexander Woollcott


Mae West (1892-1980) US actor:

“A hard man is good to find.”

“A man can be short and dumpy and getting bald but if he has fire, women will like him.”

“A man has one hundred dollars and you leave him with two dollars, that’s subtraction.”

“A man’s kiss is his signature.”

“An ounce of performance is worth pounds of promises.”

“Anything worth doing is worth doing slowly.”

“Between two evils, I always pick the one I never tried before.”

“Don’t marry a man to reform him – that’s what reform schools are for.”

“Give a man a free hand and he’ll run it all over you.”

“Good sex is like good bridge. If you don’t have a good partner, you’d better have a good hand.”


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