Парола Мечо vs Борко на изборите standartnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from standartnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Daily Rewind February 23rd Photo: Rewind 94.3
In 1927, President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill creating the Federal Radio Commission . . . now known as the Federal Communications Commission.
In 1945, Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal took an iconic photo in Japan . . . the Raising of the U.S. Flag on Iwo Jima.
In 1954, the Arsenal Elementary School in Pittsburgh received the first injections of the polio vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk.
1983, Patti Austin & James Ingram had the #1 song with “Baby, Come to Me”
In 1994, Nancy Kerrigan came home with a silver medal from the Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway. Tonya Harding placed tenth.
A group of young women toast the end of Prohibition in the luxury liner SS Manhattan, off New York, 1933. Before its repeal, the ship s bar was required to close 12 miles out from the U.S. coast. FPG/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Drinking has been so widespread throughout history that Patrick McGovern, an archaeological chemist at the University of Pennsylvania, called it a universal language in an Economist article. Indeed, you re hard-pressed to find a culture or event in history that alcohol (or lack of it) didn t feature in some way.
In a sense, alcoholic beverages are just a simple matter of chemistry and physiology. When yeast cells consume carbohydrates in grains, vegetables or fruits, they produce a fluid called
This year marks 20 years of KIT s Morning News with Dave and Lance. It s a minor milestone in KIT s 92 years long radio history but it s a pretty big deal to us! I don t know if our partnership will last another 8 years to get us to 100 or not, but radio milestones are on our radar these days and these caught our attention.
On this day in history 2/22/1924, President
Calvin Coolidge delivered the first presidential radio broadcast from the White House. Coolidge would eventually become known as America s first Radio President.
During his presidency, August 3, 1923 to March 4, 1929, running five years and seven months, Mr. Coolidge would make more than 40 radio addresses, becoming, as C. Bascom Slemp, Secretary to the President, put it, “the first President to communicate directly with all the people.”