Archive for February 14th, 2024

BELOVED KANSAS CITY DJ HAS DIED AT 44

Tragedy at Chiefs Rally: Radio Host Lisa Lopez-Galvan Killed in Mass Shooting

Lisa Lopez-Galvan has been identified as a victim of the
Kansas City Super Bowl parade shooting that saw 29
injured,
including nine children. 

Beloved Kansas City disc jockey and mother-of-two, 44, is confirmed as the dead victim of Kansas ...

Raja Thatha's stotra translations: Daily prayer schedule

posted by Bob Karm in CURRENT EVENTS,DEATH,Mass Shooting,MUSIC,RADIO and have No Comments

SOME HUMOR FROM THE PDX RETRO BLOG

Climate activists us constitution
Climate activists (Dumb and Dumber) dumped red powder
Wednesday on the protective display case holding the U.S. Constitution.
 

climate activists red powder rotunda
The suspects were arrested by D.C. police.

posted by Bob Karm in Activist,Blog Department,Climate Change,Constitution,CURRENT EVENTS and have No Comments

PICTURE OF EARTH TAKEN ON THIS DAY IN 1990

6/21/17 The pale blue dot. | Pale blue dot, Blue dot, Dots wallpaper
The picture, known as Pale Blue Dot (above) depicts our
planet as a nearly indiscernible speck roughly the size
of a pixel. 

On Valentine’s Day, 1990, 3.7 billion miles away from the sun,  
the Voyager 1 spacecraft looked back at our solar system and
snapped the first-ever pictures of the planets from its perch at
that time beyond Neptune. This is the last image Voyager 1 ever
beamed back after which the cameras were turned off to save
power and memory.

Voyager-1 spacecraft: 40 years of history and interstellar flight
Artist impression of Voyager-1.

   
   

   

    
    
    
     
       

                  
                  
                 

    
  
     









posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,HISTORY,Photography,Satellite and have No Comments

ASCAP WAS FOUNDED IN 1914

Founding of ASCAP — Mystic Stamp Discovery Center

On February 13, 1914, the American Society of Composers, Authors
and Publishers
(ASCAP)
was founded to help music creators make
a living from their work.

“If music did not pay, it would be given up.” So wrote Associate
Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes in a landmark Supreme Court
decision in 1917.

Holmes wasn’t referring to musicians themselves in that statement,
but to places of business in which copyrighted musical works could
be heard, whether such music was live or recorded—and, critically, whether or not it generated direct revenues. “Whether it pays or not,” continued Holmes, “the purpose of employing it is profit and that is enough.” Narrowly speaking, the decision in Herbert v. Shanley Co. forced Shanley’s Restaurant in
New York City to pay a fee to the American songwriter Victor Herbert for playing a song of his on a
player-piano during dinner service. The case represented a much broader victory, however, for the new musicians’ advocacy
organization of which Herbert was the head: ASCAP.

Among the founding members of ASCAP were the musical giants
of the day: Irving Berlin, James Weldon Johnson, Jerome Kern
and John Philip Sousa.

Unfair to Genius: Popular Music and Copyright Law in the Age of the Songwriter - by Gary Rosen
Victor Herbert, on piano stool, poses with the founding
members of ASCAP in 1914.
(Courtesy ASCAP)

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posted by Bob Karm in HISTORY and have No Comments