Friday, February 13, 2015

Fwd: Friday February 13, 2015: Reference.com On This Day



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From: Reference.com On This Day <thisday@reference.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 13, 2015 at 3:00 AM
Subject: Friday February 13, 2015: Reference.com On This Day
To: "Hector William G." <hectorpinillos@gmail.com>


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On This Day:
Friday February 13, 2015

This is the 44th day of the year, with 321 days remaining in 2015.

Fact of the Day: potato chips

Potato chips were invented in 1853 at Saratoga Springs, New York, where chef George Crum of Moon's Lake House shaved potatoes paper thin and sent them out to a patron who had complained that his French fries were too thick. The customers were delighted, ordered more, and encouraged Crum to open up his own restaurant. Crum's new restaurant had people standing in line to get potato chips. Wise potato chips were introduced in 1921 by grocer Earl V. Wise as a way of dealing with overstocked and old potatoes. He sold them in brown paper bags the then in cellophane starting in the 1930s.

Holidays

Feast day of St. Catherine dei Ricci, St. Stephen of Rieti, St. Ermenilda or Ermengild, St. Martinian the Hermit, St. Polyeuctes of Melitene, St. Licinus or Lesin, and St. Modomnoc.
Florida: Fiesta de Menendez (founder of St. Augustine).

Events

1633 - Galileo was detained by the Italian Inquisition in Rome.
1635 - The oldest public school in the United States, the Boston Public Latin School, was founded.
1689 - Following the Glorious Revolution in Britain, Mary II, the daughter of the deposed king, James II, and William III prince of Orange, her husband, were proclaimed joint sovereigns.
1741 - "The American Magazine" was published in Philadelphia, and became the first U.S. magazine, beating Benjamin Franklin's "General Magazine" off the presses by three days.
1795 - The first U.S. state university opened, the University of North Carolina.
1914 - The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) was founded.
1920 - The League of Nations recognized the perpetual neutrality of Switzerland.
1935 - Bruno Richard Hauptmann was found guilty of first-degree murder in the kidnap-death of the infant son of Charles Lindbergh and his wife, Anne Morrow Lindbergh; Hauptmann was later executed.
1945 - Allied planes began the controversial and devastating bombing the German city of Dresden.
1974 - Russian novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn was expelled from the USSR.
2000 - The last original "Peanuts" comic strip appears in newspapers one day after Charles M. Schulz dies.
2001 - A 6.6 magnitude earthquake hit El Salvador, killing at least 402 people just one month after another quake killed more than 800 people.

Births

1888 - Georgios Papandreou, three-time Greek prime minister.
1892 - Grant Wood, American painter.
1910 - William Shockley, American Nobel Prize-winning physicist whose work led to the miniaturization of radio, TV, and computer circuits.
1923 - Charles "Chuck" Yeager, American test pilot, the first man to break the sound barrier.
1950 - Peter Gabriel, English musician.
1956 - Princess Alia bint Al Hussein, Jordanian Royal Family member.

Deaths

1728 - Cotton Mather, American colonist and writer.
1883 - Richard Wagner, German composer.
2002 - Waylon Jennings, American country music singer and guitarist.

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