On this day in 1936, the U.S. Baseball Hall of Fame elected its first members in Cooperstown, New York: Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Matthewson and Walter Johnson.
Today, with approximately 350,000 visitors per year, the Hall of Fame continues to be the hub of all things baseball. It has elected 278 individuals, in all, including 225 players, 17 managers, 8 umpires and 28 executives and pioneers.
The U.S. State Department angrily accused the Soviet Union of shooting down an unarmed American jet that strayed into East German airspace. Three U.S. officers aboard the plane were killed in theincident. The Soviets responded with charges that the flight wasa “gross provocation,” and the incident was an ugly reminder ofthe heightened East-West tensions of the Cold War-era.
The occupants of the aircraft were Lieutenant Colonel Gerald K. Hannaford, Captain Donald Grant Millard and Captain John F. Lorraine. According to the U.S. military, the jet was on a training flight over West Germany and pilots became disoriented by a violent storm that led the plane to veer nearly 100 miles off course.
Memorial at the crash site near Vogelsberg.
North American T-39A Sabre Liner USAF.
The Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-19S "Farmer" at the National Museum of the United States Air Force.
The special instruction Quincy Jones sent out to the several dozen pop stars invited to participate in the recording of “We Are the World” was this: “Check your egos at the door.” Jones was the producer of a record that would eventually go on to sell more than 7 million copies and raise more than $60 million for African famine relief. But before “We Are the World” could achieve those feats, it had to be captured on tape—no simple feat considering the number of major recording artists slated to participate.
With only one chance to get the recording the way he and writers Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie wanted it, Jones convened the marathon recording session of “We Are the World” at around 10 p.m. on the evening of January 28, 1985, immediately following the conclusion of the American Music Awards ceremony held just a few miles away.
Singer/actor/activist Harry Belafonte was the initiator of the events that led to the recording of “We Are the World.”
Quincy Jones will be 91 in March.
A soloist booth song sheet used for the 1985 recording of ‘We Are the World’, individually signed by the artists involved.
(FOX NEWS) – The oldest toy store in San Francisco announced this week that it is shutting down due to the rampant crime and violence in the city’s streets, and because of inflation.
Jeffrey’s Toys, the downtown San Francisco toy store that inspired Pixar’s classic "Toy Story," announced on Friday that it will be closing permanently at the end of February.