On this date in . .
.
1774:
Tommy Thumb's Song Book,
a collection of English nursery rhymes which included
"Baa Baa Black Sheep," was published by Mrs. Mary Cooper.
1882:
The U.S. Congress outlawed polygamy.
1894: The Montreal Amateur Athletic
Association beat the Ottawa Capitals 3-1 to win the first Stanley Cup. The
cup was named for Lord Stanley of Preston because he paid for it: all
$44.67.
1956:
Singer Carl Perkins was critically injured, his brother Jay killed,
in a Wilmington, Delaware, car crash. They were driving to New York
to perform Carl's hit, "Blue Suede Shoes," on TV's
Perry Como Show.
1958:
8-year-old Hank Williams Jr. made his singing debut in Swainsboro,
Georgia.
1972:
The U.S. Congress sent a proposed Equal Rights
Amendment to the Constitution to the states for ratification. Only 35 states
ratified the it; three short of the number needed for approval.
1981:
RCA introduced its Selectra Vision laser disc player. It never
caught on.
1990:
George Bush shocked the world when he announced, "I do not like
broccoli and I haven't liked it since I was a kid and my mother made
me eat it, and I'm the President of the United States and I'm not
going to eat any more broccoli."
1991:
Los Angeles Kings' owner Bruce McNall and superstar Wayne Gretzky
set a world record by buying a baseball card. They paid $451,000 for
one of six known Honus Wagner cards.
1997:
A powerful new "bullet train"
service was launched in Japan, achieving the world's fastest average speed
on a commercial run of 151.4 miles an hour.
1997:
Tara Lipinski became the
youngest women's world figure skating champion at age 14 years 10 months,.
1998:
A New York motorist, angry at being cut off, used a phony police
badge to stop the other car on the Long Island Expressway. The other
driver was a real
police officer.
1999:
Britney Spears' album "Baby One More Time" was
certified triple platinum.
2001:
A 45-year-old man was in a Memphis, Tennessee, court facing charges of
attempted burglary and drug possession when he was accused of trying to hide
cocaine under a courtroom chair. Witnesses said he reached into his shirt
pocket and tried to hide a small plastic bag of white powder under a chair
leg. A deputy retrieved the packet, the substance tested positive for
cocaine, and the defendant had another charge added to his file.
2005: A
woman claimed to have found a fingertip while eating Wendy's chili at a
restaurant in San Jose, California. The food chain lost millions before the
woman admitted it was all a hoax.
Birthdays: