Little Richard (Richard Wayne Penniman)
(December 5, 1932 – May 9, 2020)
Musician Little Richard is known for his groundbreaking stage
persona and early rock n’ roll hits "Tutti Frutti" and "Long Tall
Sally."


Little Richard (Richard Wayne Penniman)
(December 5, 1932 – May 9, 2020)
Musician Little Richard is known for his groundbreaking stage
persona and early rock n’ roll hits "Tutti Frutti" and "Long Tall
Sally."


At 2:10 p.m. on December 5, 1945, five U.S. Navy Avenger
torpedo-bombers comprising Flight 19 took off from the
Ft. Lauderdale Naval Air Station in Florida on a routine
three-hour training mission.
After having completed their objective, Flight 19 was
scheduled to take them due east for an additional 67
miles, then turn north for 73 miles, and back to the air
station after that, totaling a distance of 120 miles.
They never returned.

Steve Cropper, Blues Brothers band member and Booker T. &
the MG’s guitarist, has died.
Pat Mitchell Worley, president and CEO of the Soulsville
Foundation, told the Associated Press that Cropper’s family
notified her of his death. Cropper died Wednesday in Nashville, according to Worley.
Worley’s foundation operates at the Stax Museum of American
Soul Music in Memphis, where Cropper’s former employer,
Stax Records, used to be.
A cause of death for Cropper has not been shared. Eddie Gore,
a longtime friend of Cropper, told the outlet that he visited the
musician at a rehabilitation center on Tuesday.
Gore said that he suffered a recent fall and was working with
Cropper on producing new music.
Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper in 1968.
On December 3, 1979, the last Pacer rolled off the assembly
line at the American Motors Corporation (AMC) factory in
Kenosha, Wisconsin.
When the car first came on the market in 1975, it was a
sensation, hailed as the car of the future. “When you buy
any other car,” ads said, “all you end up with is today’s
car. When you get a Pacer, you get a piece of tomorrow.”
By 1979, however, sales had faded considerably. Today,
polls and experts agree: The Pacer was one of the worst
cars of all time.
By the end of the 1960s, AMC was the only surviving
independent automaker in the United States.
Despite (or perhaps because of) its bad reputation, the
Pacer has also earned a spot in pop-culture history.
In January 1954, Nash-Kelvinator Corporation began the
acquisition of the Hudson Motor Car Company (in what
was called a merger).
The new corporation would be called the American Motors
Corporation. An earlier corporation with the same name, co-
founded by Louis Chevrolet, had existed in Plainfield, New
Jersey, from 1916 through 1922 before merging into the
Bessemer–American Motors Corporation.