Monthly Archives: March 2012

Celebrating Texas’ Tejano Heritage

In This March 7, 2012, photo from Austin, Texas, workers erect a monument to Tejano settlers, Spanish and Mexican explorers who trail-blazed what would become the Lone Star State.The massive granite and bronze memorial is set to be officially unveiled March 29 on the South lawn of the state Capitol. (AP Photo/Will Weissert)

This week Texas’ Tejano settlers – that is, the state’s original inhabitants, after the Indians – will finally be recognized.  State leaders will dedicate a granite and bronze memorial to the Spanish explorers who established vast communities long before the likes of Stephen F. Austin or Sam Houston were even born.  Since 2002, the Texas Tejano organization has endeavored to get the true story of our state’s history to include the Spanish settlers.  Spaniards had reached Texas by the 1580’s; the entire southwestern region of what is now the United States and all of México formed what was then called “Nuevo España,” or “New Spain.”  They built entire towns, complete with churches and functioning governments, and later began intermarrying with the region’s indigenous peoples.  They took a term that various native peoples used for friend – tejas, tayshas, texias and thecas are among the varied translations – and used it to create the state’s name.  None of it is something Texas schoolchildren have traditionally learned, but that’s changing.  One of my own paternal ancestors, Marcos Alonzo de la Garza – Falcon, was born in Spain around 1550 and arrived in South Texas some 30 years later; so the event this week in Austin has personal significance for me.  I’m definitely glad, though, that México lost Texas to the United States in 1836.  But, the Lone Star state’s expansive and diverse history can’t be denied.

 

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Is the Real Story of Palestine Being Told?

I’m sure anyone in the Middle East, outside of Israel, would answer this question with a resounding ‘no.’  While the question of Palestine sovereignty is one of the most pressing issues on the international stage, author and human rights activist Susan Abulhawa looks at it from a literary standpoint.  She and her family are refugees from the 1967 ‘Six Day War,’ and one might expect her to be filled with rage towards Israel.  But, as a writer, Abulhawa knows fully that literature, like art and music, can be used as a tool to create dialogues about even the most controversial of matters and build bridges between communities that have always built walls instead.  Her book Mornings in Jenin is a fictional telling of her family’s own experiences with forced relocation, but the story takes place in the aftermath of Israel’s 1948 independence.  Many people probably don’t want to talk about it, or worst, pretend there’s no real problem at all.  But, we’ve seen what happens when people stop talking and start fighting.  They end up with the problems that plague the Middle East.  I think we should stop listening to the region’s political leaders and start listening to its writers and other artists.  Often, their resolutions don’t involve blood and bombs.

 

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Today’s Famous Birthdays

If yours is today also, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Astronaut James A. Lovell Jr. (first to complete 4 spaceflights; first to make 2 flights to the Moon; commander of Apollo 13 April 1970: planned lunar landing that was aborted after an explosion on Apollo service module) is 84.

 

Author – publisher – feminist activist Gloria Steinem is 78.

 

Singer Aretha Franklin (Respect, Baby I Love You, Natural Woman, Chain of Fools, Think, Day Dreaming; first woman inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame [1987]) is 70.

 

Actor – director – writer Paul Michael Glaser (actor: Starsky & Hutch, Single Bars Single Women; director: Butterflies are Free, The Air up There) is 69.

 

Singer – songwriter – musician Elton John (Your Song, Honky Cat, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Bennie & The Jets, Daniel, Philadelphia Freedom) is 65.

 

Actress Bonnie Bedelia (Die Hard, Presumed Innocent, They Shoot Horses Don’t They) is 64.

 

Actor John Stockwell (Born to Ride, Top Gun, City Limits) is 51.

 

Actress – opera singer Sarah Jessica Parker (Sex and the City, Miami Rhapsody, L.A. Story) is 47.

 

Figure skater Debi Thomas (Olympic bronze medalist [Calgary, 1988]) is 45.

 

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On March 25…

1634 – British colonists arrived on St. Clement’s Island off present-day Maryland and established the settlement of St. Mary’s.

 

1774 – The British Parliament passed the Boston Port Act, closing the port of Boston and demanding the city’s residents pay for the tea dumped into Boston Harbor during the Boston Tea Party the previous December.

 

1879 – Cheyenne leader Chief Little Wolf, who had led dozens of attacks on other Indian communities and engaged in several conflicts with the U.S. Army, surrendered to his friend, Lte. W.P. Clark.

 

1902 – Irving W. Colburn patented the sheet glass drawing machine.

1911 – A fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company in New York City, trapping several young, mostly female immigrant workers behind locked doors.  The 18-minute fire left 146 dead.   As a result, new labor laws were enacted to protect workers, and the owners of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company were indicted for manslaughter.

 

1932 – In Powell v. Alabama, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the convictions of 9 young Black men who had been arrested and accused of raping 2 White women on a train in Alabama.

1941 – The first paprika mill was incorporated in Dillon, SC.

 

1945 – The Soviet Union announced it would withdraw its military troops from Iran.

1954 – Radio Corporation of America (RCA) began production of TV sets that were equipped to receive programs in color at a cost of $1,000 per unit.

 

1961 – Elvis Presley gave his first post-Army concert, a benefit for planning and building the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.

 

1975 – King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was assassinated by his nephew, Prince Faisal.

 

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Cartoon of the Day

 

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Picture of the Day

The Cruz de Ferra, surrounded by an ancient mound of stones left by pilgrims, is one of the marvels to be found along the Camino de Santiago in northwestern Spain.  Photo by Alastair Bland.

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Quote of the Day

“My consultants agree that the incidents meet all of our definitions, based on experience and education, of a likely pedophile’s pattern of building trust and gradual introduction of physical touch, within a context of a ‘loving,’ ‘special’ relationship.” 

– Alycia Chambers, a psychologist, in a report to Penn State University police about Jerry Sandusky in 1998.

 

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March 24, 2012 – 271 days Until Baktun 12

 

Survivalist Tip:  A fire extinguisher is a good thing to have in your household under any circumstances.  But, they can be especially important during the immediate aftermath of the apocalypse, when power and telephone services likely will collapse.  Therefore, if a fire breaks out in your house, you can’t just call the fire department.  You shouldn’t rely upon the fire department for something like that anyway.  Just as with the police, the fire department can’t be everywhere, so you have to take care of crises yourself.  Fire extinguishers come in various sizes, but they’re very affordable and easy to operate.  And, don’t just buy 1 one of them; stockpile them like you should stockpile chocolate and bottled water!  You definitely don’t want to use your cache of bottled water to put out a fire anyway.  The chemicals in a fire extinguisher are more adept at snuffing out a fire.  Besides, not only could a fire injure you and your loved ones, it’ll melt your chocolate!

 

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Today’s Famous Birthdays

If yours is today also, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Poet – author Lawrence Ferlinghetti (Coney Island of the Mind, Starting from San Francisco) is 93.

 

Actor – writer – teacher – bodybuilder William Smith (Eye of the Tiger, L.A. Vice, Maniac Cop) is 79.

 

Fashion and costume designer Bob Mackie (The Carol Burnett Show) is 72.

 

Harmonica player Lee Oskar (War) is 66.

 

Base guitarist Dougie Thomson (Supertramp) is 61.

Actor Robert Carradine (Body Bags, Double-Crossed, The Long Riders) is 58.

 

Actress Donna Pescow (Saturday Night Fever, Glory Years, Angie) is 58.

 

Actress Lara Flynn Boyle (Twin Peaks, The Practice, Wayne’s World) is 42.

 

 

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On March 24…

1603 – Queen Elizabeth I died, and King James VI of Scotland ascended to the throne, uniting England and Scotland under a single British monarch.

 

1792 – Artist Benjamin West became the first American artist to be selected president of the Royal Academy of London.

 

1874 – Harry Houdini was born in Appleton, WI.

 

1882 – Professor Robert Koch announced the discovery of the tuberculosis germ in Berlin, Germany.

1932 – Singer Belle Baker hosted a radio variety show on WABC in New York City from a moving train – a first for radio broadcasting.

 

1949 – President Harry Truman authorized a U.S. resolution for $16 million in aid to Palestinian refugees displaced by Israel’s 1948 War of Independence.

1955 – The Tennessee Williams play, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, opened on Broadway, ultimately running for 694 shows and winning the Critics’ Circle Award as the Best American Play.

 

1958 – Elvis Presley reported to draft board 86 in Memphis, TN, to begin a 2-year stint in the U.S. Army.

 

1960 – A U.S. appeals court ruled that D.H. Lawrence’s novel, Lady Chatterly’s Lover, was not obscene and could be sent through the mail.

 

1980 – Capitol Records released some rare Beatles tracks, including stereo versions of Penny Lane and She Loves You, sung by the group in German, under the title, Sie Liebt Dich.

1989 – The Exxon Valdez, a 987-foot supertanker loaded with 1,264,155 barrels of North Slope crude oil, ran aground on Bligh Reef in Prince William Sound, Alaska, spilling 11.2 million gallons of oil into the sea and damaging nearly five hundred miles of shoreline.

 

1999 – NATO began air strikes against Yugoslavia with the bombing of Serbian military positions in Kosovo.

2002 – Halle Berry became the first African-American woman to win the Best Actress Oscar.  Denzel Washington won the Best Actor award, marking the first time African-Americans had won the year’s top acting awards.

 

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