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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Today in History

1739   Russia signs a treaty with the Turks, ending a three-year conflict between the two countries.
1776   Congress borrows five million dollars to halt the rapid depreciation of paper money in the colonies.
1862   At the Battle of Corinth, in Mississippi, a Union army defeats the Confederates.
1873   Captain Jack and three other Modoc Indians are hanged in Oregon for the murder of General Edward Canby.
1876   John L. Routt, the Colorado Territory governor, is elected the first state governor of Colorado in the Centennial year of the U.S.
1906   The first conference on wireless telegraphy in Berlin adopts SOS as warning signal.
1929   The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes officially changes its name to Yugoslavia.
1931   The comic strip Dick Tracy first appears in the New York News.
1940   U.S. Army adopts airborne, or parachute, soldiers. Airborne troops were later used in World War II for landing troops in combat and infiltrating agents into enemy territory.
1941   The Maltese Falson, starring Humphrey Bogart as detective Sam Spade, opens.
1942   Germany conducts the first successful test flight of a V-2 missile, which flies perfectly over a 118-mile course.
1944   German troops evacuate Athens, Greece.
1951   A "shot is heard around the world" when New York Giants outfielder Bobby Thomson hits a home run in the bottom of the ninth inning, beating the Brooklyn Dodgers to win the National League pennant.
1955   The children's television program Captain Kangaroo debuts.
1989   Art Shell becomes the first African American to coach a professional football team, the Los Angeles Raiders.
1990   After 40 years of division, East and West Germany are reunited as one nation.

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