Friday, May 31, 2013

In the news, Friday, May 31, 2013







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THU 30      INDEX      SAT 01
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from Breitbart


WH: NO NEED FOR SPECIAL PROSECUTOR IN IRS SCANDAL
by MEREDITH DAKE


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from Fox News


Teacher Punished for Telling Students About Constitutional Rights
By Todd Starnes


Armed Federal Agents Patrol Tea Party Rallies
Judge Napolitano questions why DHS is showing up armed to Tea Party demonstrations against the IRS.


Arizona woman facing drug charge freed from Mexico prison, family spokesman says


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from Huffington Post


Carl Sagan, Marijuana Advocate, Explains What It's Like To Be High While Carl Sagan
Carl Sagan, a titan of scientific study and communication, died in 1996, leaving behind an expansive legacy of research and education. He assumed a diverse set of roles throughout his life, including as a longtime casual user of and advocate for marijuana.


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from The Jerusalem Post


Russia to provide Syria with MiG-29 fighter planes
By JPOST.COM STAFF, REUTERS
Contradicting reports on time of delivery for anti-aircraft missiles; source tells Russian news agency missiles unlikely to be delivered before fall of 2013, while two Russian papers report missile shipment in 2014.


Analysis: Air strikes against the S-300? Not so fast
By YAAKOV LAPPIN
It's unclear what, if anything has arrived in Syria from Russia.


US, Germany to Russia: Don't hurt Syria peace efforts
By REUTERS, JPOST.COM STAFF
Secretary of State John Kerry meets with German counterpart Guido Westerwelle, says Russian plans to send air defense system to Assad puts Israel's security at risk.


Palestinians, US upset by east Jerusalem building
By TOVAH LAZAROFF, KHALED ABU TOAMEH
Erekat accuses Israel of sabotaging peace efforts, while J'lem denies new approvals were issued for construction projects.


Birthright-style program proposed for non-Jews
By SAM SOKOL


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from KXLY 4 News


Asteroid zipping past Earth with moon in tow
1998 QE2 coming within 3.6 million miles of Earth, scientists say
By Ben Brumfield      CNN


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from KHQ Local News


HAPPENING TODAY: Big Asteroid Flyby!




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from NPR


Huge Asteroid Makes Its Closest Pass To Earth Today
by Bill Chappell


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from POLITICO


Rising economy shifts 2014 election landscape
By BEN WHITE


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from The Spokesman-Review



Veterans upset by arena’s renaming
Venue temporarily redubbed for Bon Jovi
Kaitlin Gillespie, Jennifer Pignolet      The Spokesman-Review

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Starbucks to ban smoking within 25 feet of cafes
Associated Press

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Prices higher and more booze sold since liquor sales expanded

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Tornadoes leave at least nine hurt
Sean Murphy Associated Press

More heavy storms on tap for the Midwest; 1 dead
Associated Press

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Eurozone unemployment heading for 20 million
Associated Press

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Initiative seeks to fill gaps in Idaho’s online coverage
Associated Press

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Ricin-laced letters from Spokane sent to Obama, CIA and Fairchild
Mike Prager      The Spokesman-Review

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Japan halts imports after modified wheat found
Move could have severe effect on Northwest farmers
Mary Clare Jalonick      Associated Press

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Officials, mum on cop, let felon off
Arresting officer in firearm case on unexplained leave
Thomas Clouse      The Spokesman-Review

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Outspoken priest, author Greeley dies
Don Babwin      Associated Press

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Average families far from regaining recession losses
Christopher S. Rugaber      Associated Press

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In brief:  From Wire Reports:

Arpaio recall try falls short of signers

Phoenix – A campaign to force a recall election against the polarizing sheriff of metropolitan Phoenix failed on Thursday after recall organizers said they couldn’t collect enough voter signatures to bring the lawman to the ballot again.

Critics of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio had argued that the 80-year-old sheriff should be booted because his office has failed to adequately investigate more than 400 sex-crimes cases, has cost the county $25 million in legal settlements over treatment in county jails and his office was found by a federal judge to have systematically racially profiled Latinos in his signature immigration patrols.


Mass abduction reported in Mexico City

Mexico City – Eleven young people were brazenly kidnapped in broad daylight from an after-hours bar in Mexico City’s Zona Rosa, a normally calm district of offices, restaurants, drinking spots and dance clubs, anguished relatives said Thursday.

The apparent mass abduction purportedly happened sometime between 10 a.m. and noon on Sunday morning just off the Paseo de la Reforma, the city’s main boulevard, near the Angel of Independence monument and only about 11/2 blocks from the U.S. Embassy.

The incident was the second recent high-publicity blemish for the city’s largely unregulated entertainment scene, coming 20 days after the grandson of American civil rights activist Malcolm X was beaten to death at another tough bar in the downtown area.

Calling for authorities to find their loved ones, family members marched Thursday from the Interior Department building to the Zocalo, the city’s main square.


Any pact needs popular vote, Assad says

Beirut – Any agreement reached at prospective peace talks on Syria would have to be approved by the Syrian people in a nationwide referendum, President Bashar Assad said in a television interview aired Thursday.

A confident Assad said his government would participate in the peace conference, sponsored by the United States and Russia, and would negotiate directly with the opposition absent any preconditions, but he insisted that any agreement would have to be put to the ballot.

“Either side can propose anything, but nothing can be implemented without the approval of the Syrian people,” Assad said, according to the official Syrian transcript of the interview.

An agreement reached last year in Geneva, which forms the basis of the projected new talks, called for negotiations leading to the formation of a transitional government accepted by both sides in the conflict. But Assad said such an administration, which would sideline the president, also would have to pass in a popular referendum.

Left unanswered was how a referendum could be held in war-ravaged Syria, where large parts of the country remain contested or under rebel control.


Nigeria lawmakers pass gay marriage ban

Abuja, Nigeria – Nigeria’s House of Representatives voted Thursday to ban gay marriage and outlaw any groups actively supporting gay rights, endorsing a measure that also calls for 10-year prison sentences for any “public show” of affection by a same-sex couple.

Representatives approved the proposal in a voice vote, sending it immediately to President Goodluck Jonathan. It wasn’t immediately clear if Jonathan would sign the measure, though gays and lesbians already face public ridicule and possible prison sentences in Nigeria.

While Western diplomats declined to immediately comment, the United Kingdom already has threatened to stop aid to nations that discriminate against gays. But those threats appear unlikely to assuage the desire of Nigerian authorities to further criminalize homosexuality, part of a wave of such laws in African nations eager to legislate against what they believe is a challenge of their traditional values by the West.

Under the proposed law, Nigeria would ban any same-sex marriage from being conducted in either a church or a mosque. Gay or lesbian couples who marry could face up to 14 years each in prison. Witnesses or anyone who helps couples marry could be sentenced to 10 years behind bars. Anyone taking part in a group advocating for gay rights or anyone caught in a “public show” of affection also would face 10 years in prison.


House OKs change in estate tax law

OLYMPIA – Over objections that the Legislature was unconstitutionally reaching into the past to collect taxes, the House passed a change to the estate tax law that attempts to erase a loss in court.

House Bill 2064 passed on a 51-40 vote after Democrats described it as a technical fix to close a loophole the Supreme Court opened in tax law, and necessary to pay for schools. The estate tax is deposited in the school trust fund.

Republicans argued that rewriting the law to fix the problem the Supreme Court found, and applying it retroactively, was unconstitutional. The bill goes to the Senate, which will hold a hearing on a different bill on the same topic today.

OLYMPIA –The state Department of Transportation shouldn’t let trucks with oversized loads on routes where the bridges are too small, state Sen. Mike Baumgartner said Thursday.

The Spokane Republican introduced a bill that would require the department to better label the height of state bridges, and refuse to issue permits to truckers whose oversized loads aren’t going to fit through bridges that are too low or too narrow. It’s a response to the collapse of the Interstate 5 bridge over the Skagit River, which fell after being struck by an oversized load.

This wasn’t the first time the Skagit River Bridge was struck by an oversized load, Baumgartner said. The solution to the problem is not more gasoline taxes to fix bridges, he added, but better oversight.

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Mammoth found with liquid blood
Scientists may clone long-dead creature
Vladimir Isachenkov      Associated Press

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Homeless aid revamp apparently paying off
Shawn Vestal      The Spokesman-Review

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Boy Scout policy change on homosexuality weighs heavily on Kootenai sheriff
Scott Maben      The Spokesman-Review

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Idaho scrimps on state employee pay
Betsy Z. Russell      The Spokesman-Review

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Dishman Hills trailhead opening planned
Mike Prager      The Spokesman-Review

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SNAP housing will go smoke-free
Change for area’s 300 units due to take effect Aug. 1
Kip Hill      The Spokesman-Review

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Prepaid tuition program price likely to increase
Donna Gordon Blankinship      Associated Press

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Growth may be easing
GDP will rise 2.2 percent in 2013, economist says
Martin Crutsinger      Associated Press

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Home contracts at 3-year high, spurring sales optimism
Purchases rise in April of both old, new houses
Christopher S. Rugaber Associated Press

Fewer bank-owned homes sold
Alex Veiga      Associated Press

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Seekers of jobless benefits up 10,000
But labor market trend is improving overall
Christopher S. Rugaber      Associated Press

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Makers try to spark electric vehicle sales
Cheap leases among enticements meant to plug in more buyers
Tom Krisher      Associated Press

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opinion:

Editorial: Charge warranted in fatal shooting

Hold the powerful accountable
Amy Goodman

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Ephrata heats up with Basin Summer Sounds

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from The Weekly Standard


Let the Sunshine In
BY STEPHEN F. HAYES




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May 31 in history


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MAY 30      INDEX      JUN 01
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1279 BC – Ramesses II (The Great) (19th dynasty) becomes pharaoh of Ancient Egypt. He is traditionally believed to have been the pharaoh of the Exodus.

455 – Emperor Petronius Maximus is stoned to death by an angry mob while fleeing Rome.

526 – A devastating earthquake strikes Antioch killing 250,000.

1223 – Mongol invasion of the Cumans: Battle of the Kalka River: Mongol armies of Genghis Khan led by Subutai defeat Kievan Rus' and Cumans.

1578 – Martin Frobisher sails from Harwich in England to Frobisher Bay in Canada, eventually to mine fool's gold, used to pave streets in London.

1578 – King Henry III lays the first stone of the Pont Neuf (New Bridge), the oldest bridge of Paris, France.

1669 – Citing poor eyesight, Samuel Pepys records the last event in his diary.

1678 – The Lady Godiva procession in Coventry, England, began.

1775 – American Revolution: The Mecklenburg Resolves are allegedly adopted in the Province of North Carolina.

1790 – Manuel Quimper explores the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

1790 – The United States enacts its first copyright statute, the Copyright Act of 1790, to protect plays, books, and maps, for a period of 14 years, with the right of renewal for another 14 years.

1795 – French Revolution: The Revolutionary Tribunal is suppressed.

1805 – French and Spanish forces begin the assault against British forces occupying Diamond Rock.

1813 – In Australia, William Lawson, Gregory Blaxland and William Wentworth reach Mount Blaxland, effectively marking the end of a route across the Blue Mountains.

1854 – The civil death procedure is abolished in France.

1859 – Big Ben, housed in the clock tower at the Houses of Parliament in London, goes into operation, chiming for the first time.

1862 – American Civil War Peninsula Campaign: Battle of Seven Pines (or Battle of Fair Oaks): Confederate forces under Joseph E. Johnston and G.W. Smith engage Union forces under George B. McClellan outside Richmond, Virginia.

1864 – American Civil War Overland Campaign: Battle of Cold Harbor: The Army of Northern Virginia under Robert E. Lee engages the Army of the Potomac under Ulysses S. Grant and George Meade.

1866 – In the Fenian Invasion of Canada, John O'Neill leads 850 Fenian raiders across the Niagara River at Buffalo, New York/Fort Erie, Ontario, as part of an effort to free Ireland from the United Kingdom. Canadian militia and British regulars repulse the invaders over the next three days, at a cost of nine dead and 38 wounded to the Fenian's 19 dead and about 17 wounded.

1879 – Gilmores Garden in New York, New York, is renamed Madison Square Garden by William Henry Vanderbilt and is opened to the public at 26th Street and Madison Avenue.

1884 – Dr. John Harvey Kellogg applied for a patent on "flaked cereal and process of preparing same."

1884 – The arrival at Plymouth of Tāwhiao, King of Maoris, to claim the protection of Queen Victoria

1889 - Main Street, Johnstown, PA
after the Great Flood
from whatwasthere.com
1889 – Johnstown Flood: Following more than 6 inches of rain in 24 hours, the South Fork Dam, located 14 miles upstream from the town of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, suffered a catastrophic failure sending more than 4.8 billion gallons of water rushing toward Johnstown. In all, the devastating flood killed more than 2,200 people, and caused $17 million in damages.

1900 – Fifty-five U.S. Marines and sailors arrive in Beijing to defend U.S. diplomats from Boxers, members of a violent secret society that resent foreign influence. Soon, the small American guard will be besieged for 55 days.

1902 – Second Boer War: The Treaty of Vereeniging ends the war, which had raged for two-and-one-half years, between the South African Republic and the Republic of the Orange Free State on one side and Great Britain on the other, and ensures British control of South Africa.

1909 – The National Negro Committee, forerunner to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, convenes for the first time.

1910 – The Union of South Africa gained independence from the United Kingdom.

1911 – The hull of the ocean liner RMS Titanic is launched.

1911 – The President of Mexico Porfirio Díaz flees the country during the Mexican Revolution.

1913 – The Seventeenth Amendment, providing for direct election of U.S. Senators, went into effect.

1916 – World War I: Battle of Jutland: The British Grand Fleet under the command of John Jellicoe, 1st Earl Jellicoe and David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty engage the Imperial German Navy under the command of Reinhard Scheer and Franz von Hipper in the largest naval battle of the war. There was no clear-cut victor, although the British suffered heavier losses.

1921 – The Tulsa race massacre started when mobs of white residents attacked Black residents and destroyed homes and businesses in the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma—a wealthy community known as "Black Wall Street" The official death toll was 39, but recent investigations suggest the actual toll may have been much higher.

1924 – The Soviet Union signs an agreement with the Beijing government, referring to Outer Mongolia as an "integral part of the Republic of China", whose "sovereignty" therein the Soviet Union promises to respect.

1927 – The last Ford Model T rolls off the assembly line after a production run of 15,007,003 vehicles.

1929 – The first talking Mickey Mouse cartoon, "The Karnival Kid", is released.

1935 – A 7.7 Mw earthquake destroys Quetta in modern-day Pakistan killing 40,000.

1941 – A Luftwaffe air raid on Dublin, Ireland, claims 38 lives.

1941 – Anglo-Iraqi War: The United Kingdom completes the re-occupation of Iraq and returns 'Abd al-Ilah to power as regent for Faisal II.

1942 – World War II: Five Imperial Japanese Navy midget submarines begin a series of attacks on Sydney, and Newcastle, Australia.

1947 – Cold War:  The communists forced Hungarian Premier Ferenc Nagy to resign his office under duress. Negy's four-year-old son, Lazlo, was kidnapped by the communists, who threatened the boy's life, while the Premier was out of the country.

1961 – The Union of South Africa quits the Commonwealth of Nations overits policy of apartheid and proclaims the Republic of South Africa.

1961 – In Moscow City Court, the Rokotov–Faibishenko show trial begins, despite the Khrushchev Thaw to reverse Stalinist elements in Soviet society.

1962 – The West Indies Federation dissolves.

1970 – The 7.9 Mw Ancash earthquake shakes Peru with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe) and causes a landslide that buries the town of Yungay, Peru. Between 66,794 and 70,000 people were killed and 50,000 were injured.

1971 – In accordance with the Uniform Monday Holiday Act passed by the U.S. Congress in 1968, observation of Memorial Day occurs on the last Monday in May for the first time, rather than on the traditional Memorial Day of May 30.

1973 – The United States Senate votes to cut off funding for the bombing of Khmer Rouge targets within Cambodia, hastening the end of the Cambodian Civil War.

1977 – The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System was completed after three years of construction.

1981 – The burning of Jaffna library in Sri Lanka. It is one of the violent examples of ethnic biblioclasm of the twentieth century.

1985 – United States–Canadian tornado outbreak: Forty-one tornadoes hit Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, and Ontario, leaving 76 dead.

1988 – President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev wrapped up their fourth summit with one another, and the first in which Reagan travelled to Moscow.

1989 – A group of six members of the guerrilla group Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) of Peru, shoot dead eight transsexuals, in the city of Tarapoto.

1991 – Bicesse Accords in Angola lay out a transition to multi-party democracy under the supervision of the United Nations' UNAVEM II mission.

1994 – The United States announced it was no longer aiming long-range nuclear missiles at targets in the former Soviet Union.

1997 – The Confederation Bridge opened, linking Prince Edward Island with the mainland New Brunswick, Canada.

2002 – Secretary of the Navy Gordon H. England issued Instruction 10520.6 which directed all U.S. Navy ships to fly the first Navy Jack in honor of those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks. The ensign – thirteen alternating red and white stripes across which is a rattlesnake with the motto "Don't Tread On Me" – would be flown for the duration of the Global War on Terrorism.

2005 – Breaking a silence of 30 years, Vanity Fair reveals that former FBI official Mark Felt stepped forward as "Deep Throat," the secret Washington Post source that helped bring down President Richard M. Nixon during the Watergate scandal.

2010 – In international waters, armed Shayetet 13 commandos, intending to force the flotilla to anchor at the Ashdod port, boarded ships trying to break the ongoing blockade of the Gaza Strip, resulting in nine civilian deaths.

2013 – The asteroid 1998 QE2 and its moon make their closest approach to Earth for the next two centuries.



Saints' Days and Holy Days

Traditional Western

St. Angela Merici, Virgin     Double
St. Petronilla, Virgin      Commemoration


Contemporary Western


Anglican, Episcopal, Lutheran



Eastern Orthodox


Saints

Apostle Hermes of Philippopolis (Hermas), of the Seventy Apostles (1st c.)
Martyr Hermias of Comana (160)
Martyr Magus (the Magician), who converted upon witnessing the martyrdom
      of Hermias (160)
Martyr Philosophus at Alexandria (252)
Martyrs Eusebios and Charalampos, in Nicomedia, by fire
Five Martyrs of Ashkelon, dragged to death
Saint Eustathius, Patriarch of Constantinople (1025)

Pre-Schism Western Saints

Virgin-martyr Petronilla, at Rome (1st or 3rd c.)
Martyr Crescentian, in Sassari in Sardinia (c. 130)
Martyrs Cantius, Cantian, Cantianilla and Protus, in Aquileia (304)
Saint Lupicinus of Verona, Bishop of Verona, described as 'the most holy,
      the best of bishops' (5th c.)
Saint Paschasius, Deacon and Confessor in Rome, who is mentioned
      by Pope Gregory I (512)
Saint Winnow, Mancus and Myrbad, Irish saints who lived in Cornwall
      where churches are dedicated to them (6th c.)

Post-Schism Orthodox Saints

Saint Philotheus (Leschynsky) of Tobolsk, Metropolitan of Tobolsk
      and the "Apostle of Siberia" (1727)

New Martyrs and Confessors

Hieromartyr Archpriest Philosophus (Ornatsky), with his sons Boris
      and Nicholas, in St. Petersburg (1918)
Hieromartyrs Hierotheus (Afonin), Bishop of Nikolsk (1928),
      and Hieroschemamonk Seraphim (Nikolsky) (1923)

Other commemorations

First translation of the relics (1591) of Hieromartyr Philip II, Metropolitan
      of Moscow and all Russia (1569), to Solovki
Repose of Archimandrite Macarius of Peshnosha Monastery, disciple
      of Blessed Theodore of Sanaxar (1811)
Finding of the relics (1960) of New Martyr Nicholas the Deacon,
      of Mytilene (1463)



Thursday, May 30, 2013

JULY — DECEMBER, 1930



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back      1930-1939 INDEX      next
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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31



JANUARY — JUNE, 1924



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back      1920-1929 INDEX      next
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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31



JULY — DECEMBER, 1919



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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31



JULY — DECEMBER, 1913



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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31



JULY — DECEMBER, 1902



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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31



JULY — DECEMBER, 1890


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JULY



                                     TUE 01      WED 02      THU 03      FRI 04      SAT 05

SUN 06      MON 07      TUE 08      WED 09      THU 10      FRI 11      SAT 12

SUN 13      MON 14      TUE 15      WED 16      THU 17      FRI 18      SAT 19

SUN 20      MON 21      TUE 22      WED 23      THU 24      FRI 25      SAT 26

SUN 27      MON 28      TUE 29      WED 30      THU 31



AUGUST


                                                                                           FRI 01      SAT 02


SUN 03      MON 04      TUE 05      WED 06      THU 07      FRI 08      SAT 09

SUN 10      MON 11      TUE 12      WED 13      THU 14      FRI 15      SAT 16

SUN 17      MON 18      TUE 19      WED 20      THU 21      FRI 22      SAT 23

SUN 24      MON 25      TUE 26      WED 27      THU 28      FRI 29      SAT 30

SUN 31



SEPTEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30



OCTOBER



                                                      WED 01      THU 02      FRI 03      SAT 04

SUN 05      MON 06      TUE 07      WED 08      THU 09      FRI 10      SAT 11

SUN 12      MON 13      TUE 14      WED 15      THU 16      FRI 17      SAT 18

SUN 19      MON 20      TUE 21      WED 22      THU 23      FRI 24      SAT 25

SUN 26      MON 27      TUE 28      WED 29      THU 30      FRI 31



NOVEMBER



                                                                                                           SAT 01

SUN 02      MON 03      TUE 04      WED 05      THU 06      FRI 07      SAT 08

SUN 09      MON 10      TUE 11      WED 12      THU 13      FRI 14      SAT 15

SUN 16      MON 17      TUE 18      WED 19      THU 20      FRI 21      SAT 22

SUN 23      MON 24      TUE 25      WED 26      THU 27      FRI 28      SAT 29

SUN 30



DECEMBER



                  MON 01      TUE 02      WED 03      THU 04      FRI 05      SAT 06

SUN 07      MON 08      TUE 09      WED 10      THU 11      FRI 12      SAT 13

SUN 14      MON 15       TUE 16      WED 17      THU 18      FRI 19      SAT 20

SUN 21      MON 22      TUE 23      WED 24      THU 25      FRI 26      SAT 27

SUN 28      MON 29      TUE 30      WED 31