GOOD MORNING – TODAY IS by John Dwyer 

  
GOOD MORNING – TODAY IS MONDAY, December 21, the 356th day of 2015 with 09 to follow. Sunrise in the Boston area is @ 7:10 and sunset is @ 4:13. Today is the first day of winter in the Northern Hemisphere. The moon is waxing. The morning stars are stars are Jupiter, Mercury, & Saturn. The evening stars are Mars, Neptune, Uranus & Saturn.

ON THIS DAY IN: 1620 – The “Mayflower”, and its passengers, pilgrims from England, landed at Plymouth Rock, MA. 

1849 – The first ice-skating club in America was formed in Philadelphia, PA.

1879 – Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” was first performed in Copenhagen, Denmark, with a revised happy ending. 1898 – Scientists Pierre and Marie Curie discovered the radioactive element radium. 

1909 – McKinley and Washington schools of Berkeley, CA, became the first authorized, junior-high schoolsin the U.S. 

1913 – Arthur Wynne published a new “word-cross” puzzle in the “New York World” in England. The name was later changed to “crossword.” 

1914 – Marie Dressler, Charlie Chaplin, Mabel Normand and Mack Swain appeared in the first six-reel, feature-length comedy. The film was entitled “Tillie’s Punctured Romance”. 

1925 – Eisenstein’s film “Battleship Potemkin” was first shown in Moscow. 

1937 – Walt Disney debuted the first, full-length, animated feature in Hollywood, CA. The movie was “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” 

Disney movies, music and books 

1944 – Horse racing was banned in the United States until after the end of World War II. 

1945 – U.S. Gen. George S. Patton died in Heidelberg, Germany, of injuries from a car accident. 

1948 – The state of Eire (formerly the Irish Free State) declared its independence. 

1951 – Joe DiMaggio announced his retirement from major league baseball. 

1958 – Charles de Gaulle was elected to a seven-year term as the first president of the Fifth Republic of France. 

1968 – Apollo 8 was launched on a mission to orbit the moon. The craft landed safely in the Pacific Ocean on December 27. 

1971 – The U.N. Security Council chose Kurt Waldheim to succeed U Thant as secretary-general. 

1978 – Police in Des Plaines, IL, arrested John W. Gacy Jr. and began unearthing the remains of 33 men and boys that Gacy was later convicted of killing. 

1981 – Cincinnati defeated Bradley 75-73 in seven overtimes. The game was the longest collegiate basketball game in the history of NCAA Division I competition. 

1988 – 270 people were killed when Pan Am Boeing 747 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, due to a terrorist attack. 

1990 – In a German television interview, Saddam Hussein declared that he would not withdraw from Kuwait by the UN deadline. 

1991 – Eleven of the 12 former Soviet republics proclaimed the birth of the Commonwealth of Independent States. 

1995 – The city of Bethlehem passed from Israeli to Palestinian control. 

1996 – After two years of denials, U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich admitted violating House ethics rules. 1998 – Israel’s parliament voted overwhelmingly for early elections. It was the signal to the demise of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hard-line government. 

1998 – A Chinese court sentenced two dissidents to long prison terms for attempting to organize an opposition party. A third man was sentenced to 12 years in prison on December 22, 1998. 

1998 – The first vaccine for Lyme disease was approved. 

2001 – The Islamic militant group Hamas released a statement that said it was suspending suicide bombings and mortar attacks in Israel. 

2002 – Larry Mayes was released after spending 21 years in prison for a rape that maintained that he never committed. He was the 100th person in the U.S. to be released after DNA tests were performed. 

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