Wednesday, March 02, 2011

POPnews - March 2nd

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[87 km (54 miles) southeast of Seattle the highest peak in the Cascade Range rises above a primordial rain forest of uncommon lushness and beauty; on clear days it towers over a similarly lovely urban jungle as well, serving as a constant reminder of our frailty as humans on this planet. Part of the Cascade Volcanic Arc - along with its fellows Baker, Jefferson, Shasta and Garibaldi - Rainier could in theory get uppity like Mount St. Helens and play tag with the approximately 10 million people living in the region using nothing but molten rock. Then again, it probably won't...]

986 CE - Louis V - the last Carolingian monarch and remembered today as Louis le Fainéant (Louis Do-Nothing) - became King of the Franks.

1127 - Charles the Good, Count of Flanders, was assassinated for distributing bread to the poor during a famine. The bastard...

1808 - The first meeting of the Wernerian Natural History Society - the Scottish learned society founded the previous January 12th which closed down in April 1858 - was held in Edinburgh.

1815
- The Kandyan Convention was signed by the British (represented by John d'Oyly) and Sri Lanka's last King Sri Vikrama Rajasinha; the treaty was not popular with the people of Kandy, a kingdom in mountainous central Sri Lanka, who had been holding off the invasion of their island since 1796. Its signing and implementation would bring about the Uva Rebellion against the colonial Governor, Robert Brownrigg.

1836 - The Texas Declaration of Independence was adopted at the Convention of 1836, held at Washington-on-the-Brazos; this opening salvo of the Texas Revolution - owing in large part to the tyrannical rule of Mexico's President-General Antonio López de Santa Anna - resulted in the creation of the Republic of Texas.

1865 - The Volkner Incident - the murder of missionary Carl Völkner during New Zealand's Second Taranaki War - brought about the mass confiscation of land occupied by the Maori of Whakatohea.

1867 - The US Congress passed the first of four Reconstruction Acts, which were intended to return the country to normalcy following the US Civil War during the period known as Reconstruction.

1877 - Just two days before the Inauguration was scheduled to occur, the US Congress declared Rutherford B. Hayes the winner of the election even though Samuel J. Tilden had won the majority of the popular vote in November 1876.

1888 - The Convention of Constantinople was signed signed by Great Britain, Germany, Austro-Hungary, Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire, guaranteeing free maritime passage through the Suez Canal during war and peace.

1899 - Mount Rainier National Park was established in the US state of Washington.

1903 - New York City's Martha Washington Hotel opened at 30 E. 30th Street, becoming the first hotel exclusively for women; it's still in business under the name Hotel 30 30, although the women-only policy has been dropped.

1939 - Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli was elected Pope following the death of Pius XI, taking the name Pius XII.

1955 - King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia abdicated in favor of his father, King Norodom Suramarit, opting to serve as Prime Minister instead.

1956 - Morocco declared its independence from France.

1962 - Wilt Chamberlain set an NBA record by scoring 100 points in a single game.

1969 - The first test flight of the Anglo-French Concorde was conducted in the skies over Toulouse, France.

1970 - Ian Smith declared Rhodesia a republic, breaking that country's last links with Britain.

1978 - Czech Vladimír Remek became the first non-Russian or non-American to go into space aboard Soyuz 28.

1996 - Ranabima Royal College was established in Kandy, Sri Lanka, on the anniversary of the signing of the Kandyan Convention.
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2 comments:

Seumas Gagne said...

Mount Rainier has such an impact on Seattle psychology. I wonder if anyone has researched a correlation between the days we can see the mountain and how good we feel. I know it effects me. Thanks for the shout-out!

michael sean morris said...

That would be a good idea...

I've noticed a similar effect in Vancouver whenever the ghostly caldera of Mount Baker makes an appearance, even though Mount Rainier is much closer to Seattle. Having seen (and photographed it) I can verify how powerful it is.

I'm always looking for ways to give Seattle - as well as Seattle-ites - big ups!