Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Shutterstock acquires Splash News

 By Andrew Kersley

Photo licensing giant Shutterstock has acquired Splash News, a fellow provider of image and video content for publishers, for an undisclosed sum.

Founded in 1990, Splash News has a network of over 4,000 photographers and an archive of over 27 million images focused on some of the biggest celebrity events of the last three decades for customers including E! News, People, Daily Mail, TMZ, Dow Jones, Reach and News UK.

Splash News was previously saved from closure in 2018 after its owner Silverhub Media went into administration.

Source: Press release

Deal size: Undisclosed

Country: US

Status: Official

Los Angeles County Covid-19


May 31, 2022
New Cases: 2,151 (2,976,323 to date)
New Deaths: 4 (32,133 to date)
Current Hospitalizations: 479
Today’s Positivity Rate: 4.0%


 

Los Angeles County Covid-19 Trends May 1st - 31st

                    NEW CASES                DEATHS              HOSPITALIZATIONS

1ST                    1,824                              4                            226

2ND                    1,368                             5                            225

3RD                    1,888                             7                            236

4TH                    2,484                             5                            248

5TH                    3,003                             4                            244

6TH                    3,270                             6                            239

7TH                    3.238                             2                            258

8TH                    2,146                             1                            248

9TH                    1,695                             2                            242

10TH                  2,044                             4                            252

11TH                  2,997                             7                            249

12TH                  3,407                             9                            267

13TH                  4,025                             6                            298

14TH                  3,489                             6                            319

15TH                  2,707                             4                            318

16TH                  1,941                             5                            312

17TH                  2,233                             8                            327

18TH                  4,384                           10                            363

19TH                  4,725                             9                            379

20TH                  3,180                           10                            401

21ST                  5,152                             4                            402

22ND                 4,750                              3                            385

23RD                 2,476                              7                            391

24TH                 3,589                              9                             419

25TH                 4,202                              6                             410

26TH                 6,245                              9                             429

27TH                 5,800                              8                             455

28TH                 5,685                              4                             464

29TH                 4,108                              3                             438

30TH                 2,901                              6                             486

31ST                 2,151                              4                             479        

Tuesday Afternoon in the Blogosphere


 





Jake Lingle lived well beyond the means of a Tribune reporter. After his slaying, it became clear how - Chicago Tribune

Today in Labor History May 31, 2022

 


Rose Will Monroe, Rosie the Riveter


The Johnstown Flood occurred on this date.  More than 2,200 died when a dam holding back a private resort lake burst upstream of Johnstown, Pennsylvania.  The resort was owned by wealthy industrialists including Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick.  Neither they nor any other members of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club were found guilty of fault, despite the fact the group had created the lake out of an abandoned reservoir. – 1889

The infamous trial of Sacco and Vanzetti, in which the two Italian anarchists were railroaded for a crime they did not commit, began in Dedham, Massachusetts. Judge Webster Thayer’s anti-worker and anti-immigrant opening remarks set the tone for the trial. – 1921
Some 25,000 white autoworkers walked off the job at a Detroit Packard Motor Car Company plant heavily involved in wartime production, when three black workers were promoted to work on a previously all-white assembly line.  The black workers were relocated and the whites returned. – 1943
Rose Will Monroe, who became known as “Rosie the Riveter” died at the age of 77.  Rose worked at an aircraft parts factory during World War II, and was “discovered” by filmmakers producing a film promoting war bonds.  The song and the iconic poster were already well known and a real-life Rosie who was a riveter “proved too good for the film’s producers to resist,” said Monroe’s daughter. – 1997

Digitalbox acquires TVGuide.co.uk for £550,000

 By Andrew Kersley

Entertainment Daily and The Tab publisher Digitalbox has acquired the web and mobile platform assets of TVGuide.co.uk for a total cash fee that will reach £550,000.

A chunk of that fee, which will be paid in instalments, will go towards the platform redevelopment of TVGuide.co.uk so that it can integrate into Digitalbox’s Graphene technology platform.

TVGuide will also be renamed Yo.TV as part of the deal, funded using £2.8m of cash already held by Digitalbox.

In its full-year results to 31 December 2021, Digitalbox reported revenues had increased by 68% from £2.2m in 2020 to £3.7m.

Source: Press release

Deal size: £550,000

Country: UK

Status: Official

Important Events From This day in History May 31st

 

31 May, 2005 U.S.A. Watergate Mole Goes Public

2005 : The former member of the FBI "W. Mark Felt" stepped forward as "Deep Throat," the secret Washington Post source who worked with reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein that helped bring down President Richard M. Nixon during the Watergate scandal.

31 May, 1859 UK Big Ben

1859 : Big Ben rings out over the Houses of Parliament in Westminster, London, England for the first time.

31 May, 1889 U.S.A. Dam Break Johnstown, Pennsylvania

1889 : A dam breaks at a lake above Johnstown, Pennsylvania causing a tidal wave over twenty feet in height to sweep over Johnstown, PA eight miles below. Sweeping everything before the avalanche of water including houses, factories, and bridges. The death toll is estimated to be in the thousands as there was very little warning for residents.

31 May, 1916 World War I The Battle of Jutland

1916 : A German naval fleet consisting of 24 battleships, five battle cruisers, 11 light cruisers and 63 destroyers were just off the Jutland Peninsula, were attacked by a British fleet of 28 battleships, nine battle cruisers, 34 light cruisers and 80 destroyers in one of the greatest sea battles in History known as The Battle of Jutland or the Battle of the Skagerrak, a total of 100,000 men aboard 250 ships were involved in the battle.

31 May, 1921 U.S.A. Tulsa Race Riots

1921 : Following an accusation of improper conduct between a Dick Rowland, a black shoeshiner and Sarah Page, a white elevator operator, hundreds of white people gather and start to form what looks like a lynch mob which ends with the traditionally black district of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma being burnt to the ground with many black citizens choose or were forced to relocate after the riot which ended on June 1st 1921 after the National Guard troops from Oklahoma City declare martial law.

1917 Japan Builds Up War Machine

1917 : Japan spends nearly $130 million dollars on expanding their naval might during World War I at the same time that America and European nations expanded their naval forces. Due to Japan's inability to import large guns from England at this time, the country faced difficulties in building their own.

1935 India Earthquake

1935 : At 3 AM an earthquake hits Northwestern India leaving an estimated 20,000 people dead in Quetta. Among the dead were 44 members of the Royal Air Force. The Punjab government was quick to send relief in the form of relief supplies, workers, and health professionals. While railways suffered minimal damage, many heavily populated areas were greatly destroyed.

1938 China Japanese Bombing

1938 : 30 Japanese bombers have bombed the Chinese cities of Canton and Hankow and also shot down 18 Chinese planes in dogfights over the cities.

1941 Crete World War II

1941 : The German Army using over 22,000 Paratroopers conquer Crete.

1952 France Communists

1952 : Police throughout the country raided many Communist organization's headquarters and seized documents and weapons. It was likely that party members had previous knowledge of the raids according to reports indicating that much paper burning and barricading took place before the 7:35 am raid.

1957 U.S.A. Arthur Miller

1957 : The House for Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) convicts the playwright Arthur Miller of contempt of Congress for refusing to reveal the names of alleged Communist writers with whom he had attended five or six meetings in New York. Among his many well known plays was Death of a Salesman, he is also remembered for being married to Marilyn Monroe ( 1956 - 1961 ) and what many do not know is he wrote the Screenplay for "The Misfits" which starred Marilyn Monroe (1961) and was her last film before her death in 1962.

1961 South Africa Independent Republic

1961 : The country of South Africa became an independent republic.

1962 Israel Adolf Eichmann

1962 : Adolf Eichmann the Nazi SS officer who organized Adolf Hitler's wish to exterminate Europe's Jewish population was executed for his crimes against humanity.

1964 South Vietnam US Aid

1964 : It is reported that the United States provided about 97% of total economic, technical, and medical foreign aid to South Vietnam . The aid is said to be meant for the people in the rural population and is given to show support for their war effort. Foreign nations sent encouraging messages to the United States for their effort, but the amount of aid given by other nations was expected to decline.

1970 Peru Earthquake

1970 : An earthquake measuring 7.9 on the Richter scale 30 km off the coast of Casma, Peru in the Pacific Ocean causes the destabilized the northern wall of Mount Huascarán causing an avalanche that buries the towns of Yungay and Ranrahirca. Due to the speed the avalanche traveled at more than 100 miles per hour little warning was given and an estimated 50,000 people in the two cities lost their lives making it the worst natural disaster ever recorded in the history of Peru.

1973 U.S.A. Gold Mining

1973 : An increase in the price of gold prompts mining companies to make new exploration efforts in old mines in states such as California and Nevada.

1973 U.S.A. Bombing Cambodia

1973 : President Richard Nixon's South-East Asia policy for continued bombing of Cambodia is ended when the US Senate vote to cut off funds for the bombing of Cambodia, this follows a similar vote in early May by the House of Representatives.

1977 U.S.A. Alaska Oil Pipeline

1977 : The almost 800 miles long Trans Alaska Oil Pipeline is completed connecting oil fields in northern Alaska to the sea port of Valdez in the Gulf of Alaska in southern Alaska.

1988 Soviet Union (INF) Treaty

1988 : The Final Summit between President Reagan and President Gorbachev in Moscow on removing Intermediate Range Nuclear Missiles known as the (INF) Treaty ends with agreement on both sides.

1998 UK Spice Girls

1998 : Ginger Spice / Geri Halliwell announces she it to quit the popular Spice Girls over differences between other members of the group.

2000 Fiji Coup

2000 : A coup led by George Speight, an indigenous Fijian who is demanding the removal of ethnic Indians from senior government positions. Members of the coup are holding a number of hostages including the country's prime minister.

2008 Concerns Over Corn Crop in U.S. Corn Belt

2008 : Following an unusually late planting season in the rain-soaked Midwest Concerns over this years crop in the Corn Belt bring further fears that on top of the much increased cost of Gas causing inflationary pressures in the food chain, a poor crop this year could further impact food prices and inflationary pressures in the US.

2012 Canada Interpol Hunt Canadian Killer

2012 : Interpol has added Luke Rocco Magnotta, suspected killer, to their most wanted list. Magnotta is suspected of murdering Jun Lin, a Chinese student who was possibly in a relationship with him, and sending body parts of the victim to political party offices in Ottawa. Magnotta had fled Canada was found by police in Berlin and was taken into custody on June 4th.

2013 Syrian President Warns Israel

2013 : Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, accused of using chemical weapons against rebel forces, has warned the country of Israel against any future air strikes. Assad stated that works on a contract to supply air defense missiles was underway and in response Israel stated that if the defense missiles were used it would attack. Israel had been conducting air strikes in the country in an effort to stop weapons being sent to Hezbollah in Lebanon.

https://www.thepeoplehistory.com/june1st.html

Sunday, May 29, 2022

Today in Labor History May 29, 2022

 



Animators working for Walt Disney began what was to become a successful five-week strike for recognition of their union, the Screen Cartoonists’ Guild. The animated feature Dumbo was being created at the time and, according to Wikipedia, a number of strikers are caricatured in the feature as clowns who go to “hit the big boss for a raise”. – 1941
The United Mine Workers (UMWA) and the U.S. government signed a pact establishing one of America’s first union medical and pension plans. The UMWA Welfare and Retirement Fund permanently changed health care delivery in U.S. coal fields. The Fund was used to build eight hospitals in Appalachia. It also established many clinics and recruited doctors to practice in rural coalfield areas. – 1946
The United Auto Workers (UAW) at General Motors won a hospitalization plan. – 1950
The United Farm Workers of America reached agreement with Bruce Church Inc. on a contract for 450 lettuce harvesters, ending a 17-year-long boycott. The pact raised wages, provided company-paid health benefits to workers and their families, created a seniority system to deal with seasonal layoffs and recalls, and established a pesticide monitoring system. – 1996
UAW members at General Motors accepted major contract concessions in return for a 17.5 percent stake in the financially struggling company. – 2009

Important Events From This day in History May 29th

 

29 May, 1980 U.S.A. "Dallas" Who Shot JR

1980 : The guessing game continues over who shot JR in the hit television series "Dallas" with speculation including Dusty, Sue Ellen and just about anybody in the show. But viewers will have to wait for the fall before the cliff hanger is resolved as the cast and CBS are giving nothing away.

29 May, 1953 Tibet Conquest Of Mount Everest

1953 : Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal become the first explorers to reach the top of Mount Everest . Due to the amount of time it took to descend the mountain it was June 2nd before the rest of the world were told about the conquest.

29 May, 1985 Belgium Heysel Stadium Disaster

1985 : Minutes before the start of the European Cup Final between Liverpool and Juventus at Heysel Stadium in Brussels, crowd Violence Erupts which causes a wall to collapse killing 39 football fans and injuring at least another 400.

History of Soccer

29 May, 1914 Canada The Empress of Ireland

1914 : The Empress of Ireland and A Norwegian coal freighter, the Storstad, crash in St. Lawrence River in thick fog causing the deaths of 1,073 passengers and crew, this was one of the worst maritime accidents in history.

29 May, 1928 North Pole Italian Dirigible Italia

1928 : The fate of the Italian Dirigible Italia (airship) is not looking good and rescue parties are searching for any remains 1 week after she set out on the heroic trip to reach the North Pole.

29 May, 1932 U.S.A. World War I Vets

1932 : As the great depression of the 30s continue World War I veterans known as the " Bonus Army " begin arriving in Washington to demand cash bonuses they weren't scheduled to receive for another 13 years be paid early to allow them to survive, by late June over 20,000 World War I vets were camped in vacant government buildings and open fields around the capitol.

More about the Bonus Army Protest

1942 U.S.A. Bing Crosby / White Christmas

1942 : Bing Crosby records the world's top selling record White Christmas, for the soundtrack of the film Holiday Inn.

1943 U.S.A. "The Million Dollar Band"

1943 : "The Million Dollar Band" was heard for the first time on NBC radio.

1944 Italy World War II

1944 : The allies are pounding the last ditch defenses of the German 10th Army as they surround Rome in Italy and are now only 17 miles from Rome.

1960 England Sophia Loren

1960 : Sophia Loren has called in Scotland Yard after a million dollars of Jewels had been stolen which included Diamonds, Rubies and emeralds. She is in England shooting the film version of George Bernard Shaws "The Millionaires."

1968 Manchester United win European Cup

1968 : Manchester United beat Portuguese side Benfica 4-1 to become the first English club to win the European Cup. The Manchester United team include the legendary George Best, who was named European Footballer of the Year.

1968 U.S.A. Truth In Lending Act

1968 : The (TILA) Truth In Lending Act passes into law with regulations designed to protect consumers in credit transactions requiring clear disclosure of key terms of the lending arrangement and all costs. It is part of the "Consumer Credit Protection Act".

1972 Israel Airport Shootings

1972 : Three gunmen open fire on crowds at Lod International Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel, killing 26 people and injuring dozens more. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine claimed responsibility and said they had recruited the gunmen from the Japanese Red Army who committed the murders.

1984 England Police and Miners Clash

1984 : At least 5,000 miners picket the Orgreave coking plant near Sheffield trying to stop British Steel's coke convoys, they are met by police using riot gear forcing the pickets to allow lorry drivers with coke deliveries for British Steel and a number of fights break out with police using truncheons and charging the picketers who were using Smoke bombs, bricks, stones.

1990 Russia Boris N. Yeltsin

1990 : Boris N. Yeltsin elected president of the Russian republic by the Russian parliament.

1996 U.S.A. Christopher Reeve / Superman

1996 : It has been confirmed that Christopher Reeve suffered a neck injury on the weekend when thrown from a horse , but it is unknown at this stage if it will be permanent, Christopher Reeve is best known as the actor who plays Superman.

1996 Israel Benjamin Netanyahu

1996 : Benjamin Netanyahu becomes the Israeli prime minister.

1999 Space International Space Station

1999 : The Discovery Space Shuttle completes the first docking with the International Space Station.

2004 U.S.A. World War II Memorial

2004 : The World War II memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. is dedicated to veterans from World War II.

2007 Nigerian President Sworn In

2007 : Newly elected president of Nigeria, Umaru Yar'Adua, was sworn in at a ceremony in the capital Abuja. Despite claims that the election was corrupt, the inauguration marked the first time a civilian leader had peacefully taken over from another civilian leader in Nigeria. There were some protests from opposition groups, but minimal conflict.

2008 Iceland Hit by Earthquake

2008 : An earthquake with a magnitude of 6.1 hits Iceland. The earthquake struck thirty miles out of the capital Reykjavik, shaking buildings and causing multiple aftershocks.

2009 United States Music Producer Sentenced

2009 : Famous music producer Phil Spector was sentenced to at least nineteen years in prison for the murder of actress Lana Clarkson in 2003. The sixty-nine year old had pleaded not guilty to the charges, but a jury decided that he had shot her in his mansion and killed her. Spector was famously connected to popular music in the 1960s by working with artists like Tina Turner, but had even developed an eccentric and violent reputation then.

2012 Hong Kong Martian Pink Diamond Sold for $17.4 Million

2012 : A rare pink diamond was sold at Christie's in Hong Kong after six minutes of bidding for $17.4 million. The diamond was the biggest of its type to ever be sold and was bought by an anonymous bidder. The 12-carat diamond was cut in 1976 by the US jeweler Harry Winston and was named Martian Pink after the Mars landing.

2013 First Gay Wedding Takes Place in France

2013 : Two men, Vince Autin and Bruno Boileau, became the first gay couple to be married in Montpellier, France. There was tight security at the event as the new law had conjured up violent protests and was considered controversial in the country.

https://www.thepeoplehistory.com/may30th.html

Our house in the Philippines

The work is almost complete, and we're looking forward to seeing the house in person. 


Friday, May 27, 2022

Los Angeles County Covid-19


May 27, 2022
New Cases: 5,800 (2,961,673 to date)
New Deaths: 8 (32,117 to date)
Current Hospitalizations: 455
Today’s Positivity Rate: 4.3%


 

Los Angeles County Covid-19 Trends May 1st - 27th

                    NEW CASES                DEATHS              HOSPITALIZATIONS

1ST                    1,824                              4                            226

2ND                    1,368                             5                            225

3RD                    1,888                             7                            236

4TH                    2,484                             5                            248

5TH                    3,003                             4                            244

6TH                    3,270                             6                            239

7TH                    3.238                             2                            258

8TH                    2,146                             1                            248

9TH                    1,695                             2                            242

10TH                  2,044                             4                            252

11TH                  2,997                             7                            249

12TH                  3,407                             9                            267

13TH                  4,025                             6                            298

14TH                  3,489                             6                            319

15TH                  2,707                             4                            318

16TH                  1,941                             5                            312

17TH                  2,233                             8                            327

18TH                  4,384                           10                            363

19TH                  4,725                             9                            379

20TH                  3,180                           10                            401

21ST                  5,152                             4                            402

22ND                 4,750                              3                            385

23RD                 2,476                              7                            391

24TH                 3,589                              9                             419

25TH                 4,202                              6                             410

26TH                 6,245                              9                             429

27TH                 5,800                              8                             455  

Friday Night in the Blogosphere


 Randy's Donuts Inglewood, California



Local Newspapers Fact Sheet - Pew Research Center




New book commemorates the Chicago Tribune’s 175th anniversary with more than 100 historic front pages - Chicago Tribune

Today in Labor History May 27, 2022

 



The U.S. Supreme Court declared the Depression-era National Industrial Recovery Act to be unconstitutional, about a month before it was set to expire. – 1935
The U.S. Fishermen and Allied Workers Union merged with Harry Bridges’ ILWU. – 1947
Delegates of the Insurance Agent’s International Union and the Insurance Workers of America, having ratified the merger agreement at their respective conventions, convened as delegates of the merged union, the Insurance Workers International Union. The 15,000-member organization merged with the United Food and Commercial Workers in 1983. – 1959

Important Events From This day in History May 27th

27 May, 1936 England RMS Queen Mary

1936 : The Cunard liner RMS Queen Mary leaves Southampton on her maiden voyage to New York with more than 1800 passengers.

27 May, 1941 World War II Bismarck

1941 : The German battleship Bismarck is sunk in the Atlantic by the Royal Naval ships Dorsetshire, King George V and Rodney after it had been damaged by torpedoes dropped by British aircraft from HMS Ark Royal.

27 May, 1923 France First Le Mans 24 hour race

1923 : The first Le Mans 24-Hour race ends with a win for Andre Lagache and Renee Leonard covering 1,372.928 miles in a Chenard-Walker car. The latest race run in 2007 is won by Frank Biela, Emanuele Pirro and Marco Werner covering 3129.75 miles in an Audi R10.

27 May, 1937 U.S.A. Golden Gate Bridge

1937 : Golden Gate Bridge connecting San Francisco and Marin County, California is opened to pedestrian traffic and more than 200,000 pedestrians walked across on opening day. The next day the Golden Gate Bridge is opened to vehicular traffic.

27 May, 1922 U.S.A. Checks

1922 : The increasing use of checks has led to a larger number of arrests by the police for people issuing fraudulent checks and banks have decided to try and halt this problem by only issuing checks for customers who are upstanding citizens.

27 May, 1943 U.S.A. The Ballpoint Pen

1943 : The Ballpoint pen, is patented in America by Hungarian Laszlo Biro.

1950 U.S.A. Frank Sinatra

1950 : Frank Sinatra made his TV debut on NBC's "Star-Spangled Review." He went on to be one of the most successful and recognizable figures in music history.

1955 British General Election

1955 : The British General Election is won by the Tories under Sir Anthony Eden.

1963 Kenya Jomo Kenyatta

1963 : The Kenya African Nation Union, wins the country's first general election and the leader of the party Jomo Kenyatta will become Kenya's first premier.

1964 India Jawaharlal Nehru Dies

1964 : Jawaharlal Nehru the founder of modern India and prime minister, dies at the age of 74.

1971 Sicily Mount Etna

1971 : Walls of Lava are threatening two towns in Sicily as they continue towards the towns of Sciara and Giarre. This is the 54th day Mount Etna has been erupting and many experts are predicting a further major eruption due to the increased lava flow and smoke.

1989 S&H Green Stamps

1989 : S&H Green stamps have been part of the retail landscape for over 50 years but the loss of it's largest customer Publix Supermarkets in Florida could well be the final nail in it's coffin this week. S&H Green Stamps has been in existence for 94 years and it's heyday in the 1960's when it was an important part of the retailing industry and very few people did not collect the Green Stamps to trade back for toasters and other gadgets is now passed due to many things ranging from the increase in discount coupons to the change in work patterns including more women working.

1994 Solzhenitsyn Returns To Russia

1994 : After 20 years of exile in the United States the dissident Nobel Prize-winning author Alexander Solzhenitsyn returns to his native Russia.

1995 U.S.A. Christopher Reeve

1995 : Actor Christopher Reeve best known for his Superman Movies is paralyzed when thrown from his horse during a jumping event in Charlottesville, Virginia.

1996 Rwanda Tutsis

1996 : 2 years after the large scale massacre of Tutsis in Rwanda the problems in Rwanda are flaring up again and this time with the Tutsis in power it is them who committing the slaughter on the Hutus. The peace in Rwanda is fragile and now with the minority Tutsis in power and exacting revenge this could again turn into a civil war where the innocents from both sides will be those losing their lives. The United Nations is hoping a larger force of peacekeepers will help but when a country is on a cycle of destruction of its own people this becomes a tall order.

1997 Tornado Jarrell, Texas

1997 : An F5 tornado (winds Greater Than 260 MPH) and almost 800 feet wide strikes Jarrell, Texas, destroying the town and killing 27 people.

1999 Netherland Slobodan Milosevic

1999 : The Hague war crimes tribunal indicted Slobodan Milosevic for crimes against humanity and genocide holding the Yugoslav president personally responsible for the horrors in Kosovo.

2000 Scotland GM Crops

2000 : Scottish farmers who accidentally planted Advanta genetically modified Rapeseed have been advised by MAFF to dig up the crop as under EU rules, the GM crops produced from the seed cannot be marketed within Europe. They are now seeking compensation from Advanta who have apologized for providing GM contaminated seed.

2005 Pakistan Suicide Bomber Attacks Shrine

2005 : A suicide bomber attacked the Bari Imam shrine created a blast that killed over eighteen people and injuring another fifty. There were hundreds of Shia Muslims at the shrine outside of Islamabad celebrating the end of a festival.

2006 Indonesia Earthquake

2006 : A 6.3-magnitude earthquake in the Indonesian city of Yogyakarta, killed at least 5,800 people, and leaves an estimated 1.5 million homeless.

2008 China Earthquake Aftershocks

2008 : Following the May 12 Earthquake a new series of aftershocks measured as high as magnitude 5.7 have struck the area once again destroying an additional 420,000 homes. The official death toll from the original quake in Sichuan province is 67,183 with a further 20,000 still missing. Even before these new aftershocks latest estimates are that more than five million people are homeless since the earthquake.

2008 United States Director Pollack Dies

2008 : Famous director and producer Sydney Pollack died at the age of seventy-three from cancer. The Oscar-winning director died surrounded by family only ten months after being diagnosed with cancer. He had directed such films as Out of Africa, Tootsie, and The Firm.

2009 Mike Tyson's Daughter Dies

2009 : Famous boxer Mike Tyson's four-year-old daughter died after an accident at home. His daughter, Exodus, had been found with a treadmill cable wrapped around her throat a few days prior to her death and was in the hospital on life support. Tyson was in Las Vegas when the accident happened but came home when he heard news of it.

2011 Actor Jeff Conway Dies

2011 : Sixty-year old actor, Jeff Conway, died after his family made the decision to take him off of life support after being in an induced coma for many days. Conway was famous for playing Kenickie in the movie musical Grease, as well as starring in the television show Taxi. Conway had struggled with alcohol and drug addiction throughout his life which he claimed began after he incurred a back injury while filming Grease.

2012 Anti-Government Protesters Gather in Casablanca

2012 : Tens of thousands of people gathered to protest the government in Casablanca, Morocco. The demonstrators were angry that Prime Minister Benkirane had failed to deliver reforms after a new government was put into office in January.

2013 Largest Flag Made in Romania

2013 : The town of Clinceni in Romania has claimed the Guinness World Record for largest flag ever made. The flag measured 1,145 feet by 744 feet and weighed five tons, taking up seven acres of field. It was estimated that forty-four miles of thread was needed to complete the project.

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