OMG Events, Birthdays and Deaths for this day in History. 181st - TopicsExpress



          

OMG Events, Birthdays and Deaths for this day in History. 181st day of 2013 - 184 remaining Sunday, June 30, 2013 TUNGUSKA DAY Possibly the most powerful, natural explosion in recorded history occurred on this day in 1908 at 7:17 a.m. The site was the Tunguska section of Central Siberia. The spectacular explosion devastated a forested area, some 70 miles in diameter, caused seismic shock, a firestorm followed by black rain and an illumination that, it is said, could be seen for hundreds of miles. Yet, no crater was formed, and only the tops of the trees were burned at the central point of the explosion. It is said that the impact threw down horses that had been standing in a field 400 miles away and moved the tracks of the Trans-Siberian Railway, as if in an earthquake. It flash-burned people 40 miles away, melted their silverware and destroyed herds of reindeer. Even now, no one knows what caused the explosion ... an extraterrestrial visitor? A comet? A meteor? A black hole? An atomic explosion? Events June 30 1841 - The Erie Railroad rolled out its first passenger train on this day. 1859 - Frenchman Charles Blondin aka Jean Francois Gravelet crossed Niagara Falls on a tightrope! It took him five minutes. 25,000 spectators stood and stared as he made his way across the falls in a most dangerous Odyssey ... one he had made several times before on stilts; carrying another man on his back; pushing a wheelbarrow; and even once, blindfolded. What some people do with nothing but spare time on their hands! Next, they’ll be going over the falls in wooden barrels! 1921 - Documents were signed forming the Radio Corporation of America, better known as RCA. RCA soon rivaled its main competitor, General Electric (GE). 1936 - Margaret Mitchell’s book, Gone with the Wind, was published in New York City. 1952 - The radio soap opera, The Guiding Light, was seen for the first time on CBS television. The daytime drama was credited by the "Guinness Book of World Records" as the longest running drama in television and radio history, running from 1937 until 2009. 1953 - The first Corvette rolled off the Chevrolet assembly line in Flint, MI. That early ’Vette sold for $3,250. 1962 - Los Angeles Dodger’s star Sandy Koufax pitched his first no-hitter in a game with the New York Mets. Koufax would toss three more no-hit games before retiring in 1966. 1970 - The Cincinnati Reds moved to their new $45,000,000 home at Riverfront Stadium. The Reds had played 48 seasons at Crosley Field. 1974 - The famous July 4th scene from the Steven Spielberg movie, Jaws, was filmed. A crowd of 400 screaming, scared, panic-stricken extras in bathing suits ran from the water, over and over and over again, until the scene was perfect. No man-eating killer white sharks were harmed during the production of this paragraph... 1975 - Cher married rock star Gregg Allman. Cher announced her divorce from Allman just days after the couple tied the knot. 1981 - Grant Tinker, head of MTM Enterprises, was named to succeed Fred Silverman as president of NBC-TV. Silverman was known as a programming wonder-boy in previous successes with CBS and ABC but would find it rough-going at the Peacock Network. 1984 - The Los Angeles Express of the United States Football League (USFL) played the longest game in professional history by beating the Michigan Panthers 27-21. The game went on for 93 minutes, 33 seconds. The old mark had been 82 minutes, 40 seconds, set by the Miami Dolphins and Kansas City Chiefs. Commercial time was not counted. 1985 - Yul Brynner left his role as the King of Siam after 4,600 performances in The King and I at the Broadway Theatre in New York City. The show had run -- on and off -- for over 34 years. 1985 - For the 13th time since 1972, the world’s official timekeeper atomic clock ticked off one extra second at 23:59 Greenwich Mean Time (also called UCT, Universal Coordinated Time) or 7:59:59 p.m. in New York. The leap second was added to compensate for the gradual slowing of the Earth’s rotation. 1985 - The creator of the Twinkie, James A. Dewar, died on this day. Mr. Dewar created the treat in 1930. Many say that Twinkies will stay fresh almost forever. In fact, many bomb shelters in the 1960s were furnished with stockpiles of Hostess Twinkies just for that reason. More than 45 billion of the soft, cream-filled, sponge cakes have been sold. 1990 - German troops’ harassment of East German citizens stopped -- as did all border control activities between East and West Germany. A few weeks later (Sep 21, 1990), all of the border units were dissolved. 1990 - New Kids on the Block (Donnie Wahlberg, Jordan Knight, Jon Knight, Danny Wood, Joe McIntyre) stepped to number one in the U.S. with their Step by Step single, just as their Step by Step LP was stepping to #1 in the U.S. and the U.K. 1991 - Frank Zappa performed with Hungarian musicians as Hungary celebrated the withdrawal of Soviet troops after some 46 years of occupation. Zappa headlined the Taban Jazzfestival this day in Budapest. 1993 - The Firm, the flick, debuted. Tom Cruise stars as a young man fresh out of law shool who joins a sinister law firm and proceeds to dig up/out the dirt. Tom gets ample help from Gene Hackman, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Hal Holbrook, Ed Harris, Holly Hunter and other superstars combined to attract receipts totalling $25.40 million the first weekend. 1994 - The temperature at Death Valley, California reached 128 degrees (Fahrenheit). The only other time it has been that hot (since 1961 when weather data was first recorded) was on July 14, 1972. In case you are wondering, the coldest day was at Death Valley was January 30, 1988, when it reached zero. 1995 - “Houston...we’ve had a problem.” Famous words from Apollo 13, the real-life mission -- and the movie, which opened on U.S. theatre screens. It brought in $25.35 million for the weekend, which was no problem at all for the film’s producers. 1995 - Garth Brooks buried the glass master of his LP The Hits beneath his star on the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame. It was the first time something like this had been done and, as far as we know, the last. 1997 - As the clock struck midnight, Red China reclaimed Hong Kong from Great Britain and the British Crown’s 156-year colonial rule came to an end. Many had predicted the worst, but Hong Kong seamlessly made the transition to a Special Administrative Region of China. As British Prime Minister Tony Blair remarked, “The vision of one country, two systems has become a reality ... I have been impressed by the Chinese leadership’s hands-off approach.” 1999 - Vodafone Group Plc of the U.K. and AirTouch Communications Inc. of the U.S. announced their plan to merge. Individually, the two companies were already leaders in mobile communications services in their respective home markets. The merger, valued at $69 billion, created a company with agreements in 102 countries across 217 networks giving over 150 million customers access to its network. 1999 - The Chicago Bulls, picking first in the NBA draft (for the first time ever), selected Duke’s power forward Elton Brand as their first overall selection. Brand had led Duke to the NCAA national title game (played March 29, 1999: UConn 77, Duke 74) and averaged 17.7 points and 9.8 rebounds per game while shooting 62 percent from the field. 2000 - The Perfect Storm premiered in the U.S. to a nearly perfect $41.33 million opening-weekend box office. George Clooney plays Billy Tyne, captain of the Andrea Gail, in a true-life drama about -- you guessed it -- a killer storm in the North Atlantic. Tyne’s crew is Bobby Shatford (played by Mark Wahlberg), Murph, (John C. Reilly), Sully (William Fichtner), Bugsy (John Hawkes) and Alfred Pierre (Allen Payne). On Halloween 1991, they are confronted by three raging weather fronts which unexpectedly collide to produce the greatest, fiercest storm in modern history -- the perfect storm (get it?). Birthdays June 30 1768 - Elizabeth Monroe (Kortright) First Lady: wife of 5th U.S. President James Monroe; died Sep 23, 1830 1917 - Susan Hayward (Edythe Marrender) Academy Award-winning actress: I Want to Live [1958], I’ll Cry Tomorrow, Valley of the Dolls; died Mar 14, 1975 1917 - Lena Horne singer: Love Me or Leave Me, Stormy Weather; actress: The Wiz; died May 9, 2010 1927 - Shirley Fry tennis champion: Australian Open [1957], French Open [1951], Wimbledon [1956], U.S. Open [1956] 1928 - June Valli singer: Crying in the Chapel, Your Hit Parade, Stop the Music, Unchained Melody, Apple Green; died Mar 12, 1993 1936 - Nancy Dussault actress: Too Close for Comfort, The Ted Knight Show; co-host: Good Morning America 1936 - Tony Musante actor: Judgment, Toma, Fatal Choice, The Grissom Gang, Breaking Up is Hard To Do 1943 - Florence Ballard singer: group: The Supremes: Baby Love, Stop! In the Name of Love, Come See About Me, You Can’t Hurry Love, My World is Empty Without You, The Happening; died Feb 22, 1976 1944 - Glenn Shorrock singer: group: Little River Band: It’s a Long Way There, Help is on Its Way, Reminiscing, Lady, Lonesome Loser, Cool Change, The Night Owls, Take It Easy on Me 1944 - Ron (Alan) ‘Rocky’ Swoboda baseball: NY Mets [World Series: 1969], Montreal Expos, NY Yankees 1946 - William Brown singer: group: The Moments: Love on a Two-Way Street, Look at Me [I’m in Love] 1946 - Bill Lenkaitis football: Penn State Unive., San Diego Chargers, New England Patriots 1949 - (Andrew) Andy Scott musician: guitar: group: The Sweet: Funny Funny, Co-Co, Little Willy, Wig Wam Bam, Blockbuster, Hell Raiser, Ballroom Blitz, Teenage Rampage, Fox on the Run 1951 - Roger Maltbie golf: champ: World Series of Golf [1985] 1952 - Brian Ogilvie hockey: NHL: Chicago Blackhawks, SL Blues 1953 - Hal Lindes musician: guitar: group: Dire Straits: Telegraph Road, Private Investigation, Money for Nothing, Walk of Life, The Man’s Too Strong 1955 - David Alan Grier actor: Tales from the Hood, Jumanji, Loose Cannons, I’m Gonna Git You Sucka, A Soldier’s Story, In Living Color, All is Forgiven 1956 - Philip Adrian Wright musician: synthesizer: group: Human League: Don’t You Want Me, [Keep Feeling] Fascination, Mirror Man, The Lebanon, Life on Your Own, Louise 1959 - Vincent D’Onofrio actor: Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Mystic Pizza, Ed Wood, The Newton Boys, The Thirteenth Floor, The Cell 1963 - Rupert Graves actor: The Madness of King George, Damage, Maurice, A Room with a View, Doomsday Gun, Mrs. Dalloway 1966 - Mike Tyson boxer: youngest heavyweight champion [20 years + 144 days] 1970 - Brian Bloom actor: Once Upon a Time in America, As the World Turns, At Home with the Webbers, Bandit 1971 - Monica Potter actress: Charrt Toppers June 30 1949 Some Enchanted Evening - Perry Como Again - Gordon Jenkins Bali Ha’i - Perry Como One Kiss Too Many - Eddy Arnold 1957 Love Letters in the Sand - Pat Boone Teddy Bear - Elvis Presley It’s Not for Me to Say - Johnny Mathis Four Walls - Jim Reeves 1965 Mr. Tambourine Man - The Byrds (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction - The Rolling Stones Wonderful World - Herman’s Hermits Before You Go - Buck Owens 1973 Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth) - George Harrison Will It Go Round in Circles - Billy Preston Kodachrome - Paul Simon Don’t Fight the Feelings of Love - Charley Pride 1981 Bette Davis Eyes - Kim Carnes A Woman Needs Love (Just like You Do) - Ray Parker Jr. & Radio The One that You Love - Air Supply Blessed are the Believers - Anne Murray 1989 Satisfied - Richard Marx Buffalo Stance - Neneh Cherry Baby Don’t Forget My Number - Milli Vanilli I Don’t Want to Spoil the Party - Roseanne Cash
Posted on: Sun, 30 Jun 2013 10:44:55 +0000

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