

Buddy Holly (Charles Hardin Holley)
(September 7, 1936 – February 3, 1959)
Buddy Holly was a singer, songwriter, and guitarist who formed The
Crickets and pioneered rock music with the hit "That’ll Be the Day,"
which topped the Billboard U.S. Best Sellers list.
He won a talent contest when he was five years old for singing "Have
You Ever Gone Sailing (Down the River of Memories)."
He died in a plane crash less than two years after his career took off.
Rolling Stone ranked him as the thirteenth "Greatest Artist of All Time."
Buddy Holly & The Crickets on the Ed Sullivan Show, January, 1958.
Carol Lynley (Carole Ann Jones)
(February 13, 1942 – September 3, 2019)
(FoxNews) – Carol Lynley who had a Hollywood career
spanning five decades died at her home in Los Angeles
Thursday. She had recently suffered a heart attack.
The star was perhaps best known for her role in 1972
disaster movie "The Poseidon Adventure."
The actress began her career as a child model, appearing
on the cover of Life magazine at the age of 15 before she
stared in Disney’s "The Light In The Forest."
TIM MAGUIRE
On this day in 1901, U.S. President William McKinley was shot and mortally wounded by Leon Czolgosz, an American anarchist . McKinley succumbed
to his wounds on September 14, 1901. Vice President Theodore Roosevelt
was sworn into office on the same day, succeeding McKinley, who had
been reelected in 1900. Gzolgosz was executed on October 29, 1901.
Leon Frank Czolgosz (May 5, 1873 – October 29, 1901)
The site of William McKinley’s tragic assassination in Buffalo, New
York is only marked by a plaque on a large boulder.
A Black September terrorist looks from the balcony of an apartment where Israeli Olympic team members are held hostage.
The Munich massacre on this day in 1972 was an attack during the 1972
Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany, in which the Palestinian
terrorist group Black September took eleven Israeli Olympic team
members hostage and killed them along with a West German police
officer.


