Sunday August 28, 2011: Reference.com On This Day

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Aug 28, 2011, 9:12:24 AM8/28/11
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On This Day:
Sunday August 28, 2011

This is the 240th day of the year, with 125 days remaining in 2011.

Fact of the Day: volcano

"A volcano is an opening in the earth from which molten rock and gas erupts. The molten rock (magma) forms a hill or mountain around the opening and the burning gas, ash, and hot lava may explode out or pour down the sides. The explosion of a volcano is called an eruption and can do much damage, as seen in Pompeii and Washington state's Mount St. Helens. There are about 800 places in the world where volcanoes are active, including 80 below the sea. There are belts were there are volcanoes, including one large one circling the Pacific Ocean and others running east-west in Indonesia and the Mediterranean Sea. The materials deep underground move around and push up to the mouth of the volcano. The theory of plate tectonics says that huge plates of material making up the Earth's crust shift and volcanoes erupt where the plates meet and push together. Some can be dormant for years and then suddenly erupt. Others become extinct. Mauna Loa in Hawaii is the world's largest volcano. Th e study of volcanoes is called volcanology. Krakatoa, the Indonesian volcanic island that exploded in 1883, was heard 3000 miles away, created tidal waves 120 feet high, and hurled five cubic miles of earth fragments into the air - some to the height of 50 miles."

Holidays

Feast Day of St. Augustine of Hippo, S.t Alexander of Constantinople, St. Edmund Arrowsmith, St. Julian of Brioude, and St. Moses of Abyssinia.

Scotland: Lammas Term.

Events

1609 - Henry Hudson discovered Delaware Bay.
1917 - Ten suffragists were arrested when they picketed the White House.
1922 - The first-ever radio commercial aired on station WEAF in New York City, for the Queensboro Realty Company.
1963 - A peaceful civil rights rally took place in Washington, D.C. where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech to more than 200,000 people.
1968 - Police and anti-war demonstrators clashed in the streets of Chicago as the Democratic National Convention nominated Hubert H. Humphrey for president. In the convention's aftermath, a federal commission investigating the convention described the confrontation as a "police riot" and blamed Chicago Mayor Richard Daley for inciting his police to violence.
1996 - The troubled 15-year marriage of Britain's Prince Charles and Princess Diana officially ended with the issuing of a divorce decree.
2000 - The New York Stock Exchange began listing the prices of seven stocks in dollars and cents; previously all stock was listed in fractions.
2005 - An evacuation is ordered by New Orleans, Louisiana mayor Ray Nagin and Louisiana governor Kathleen Blanco as Hurricane Katrina moves closer to Louisiana.

Births

1749 - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, German author.
1774 - Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton, first American-born saint.
1828 - Leo Tolstoy, Russian novelist.
1877 - Charles Stewart Rolls, English motorist, aviator, founder of Rolls-Royce Ltd.
1908 - Roger Tory Peterson, American ornithologist, conservationist.
1917 - Jack Kirby (Born Jacob Kurtzberg), American comic book artist.
1924 - Janet Frame, New Zealand author.
1925 - Donald O'Connor (born Donald David Dixon Ronald O’Connor), American singer, dancer, and actor.
1938 - Paul Martin, 21st Prime Minister of Canada.
1965 - Shania Twain (born Eilleen Regina Edwards), Canadian singer.
1969 - Jack Black (born Thomas Jack Black, Jr.), American actor.
1969 - Jason Priestley, Canadian actor.

Deaths

1955 - Emmett Till, American civil rights movement icon.
1987 - John Huston, American film director.
1989 - Joseph Alsop, an American journalist and syndicated newspaper columnist from the 1930s through the 1970s.
2006 - Melvin Schwartz, American physicist, and Nobel Prize laureate.






Reference.com On This Day
http://www.reference.com/thisday/

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