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Siesta Beach: Good for a Siesta, If You Wish

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Pink Grapefruit: More Sweet than Bitter In My Folks' Backyard

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On This Day: March 7

Updated March 7, 2012, 1:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On March 7, 1965, a march by civil rights demonstrators was broken up in Selma, Ala., by state troopers and a sheriff’s posse.

Go to article »

On March 7, 1875, Maurice Ravel, the noted French composer, was born. Following his death on Dec. 28, 1937, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1850 In a three-hour speech to the U.S. Senate, Daniel Webster endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a means of preserving the Union.
1875 Composer Maurice Ravel was born in Ciboure, France.
1876 Alexander Graham Bell received a patent for the telephone.
1926 The first successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation took place, between New York City and London.
1945 U.S. forces crossed the Rhine River at Remagen, Germany, during World War II.
1965 State troopers and a sheriff’s posse broke up a a march by civil rights demonstrators in Selma, Ala.
1975 The Senate revised its filibuster rule, allowing 60 senators to limit debate in most cases, instead of the previously required two-thirds of senators present.
1996 Three U.S. servicemen were convicted in the rape of a 12-year-old Okinawa girl and sentenced by a Japanese court to up to seven years in prison.
2003 A four-day walkout by Broadway musicians began.
2004 V. Gene Robinson was invested in Concord, N.H., as the Episcopal Church’s first openly gay bishop.
2010 Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman to win an Academy Award for best director for her Iraq War thriller “The Hurt Locker,” which won six Oscars, including best picture.
2010 Iraq held an election in which neither the Sunni-backed coalition nor the Shiite political bloc won a majority, spawning an eight-month deadlock and stalling formation of a new government.
2011 Reversing course, President Barack Obama approved the resumption of military trials at the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, ending a two-year ban.
2011 Charlie Sheen was fired from the sitcom “Two and a Half Men” by Warner Bros. Television following repeated misbehavior and weeks of the actor’s angry, often-manic media campaign against his studio bosses.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Rachel Weisz, Actress

Actress Rachel Weisz turns 41 years old today.

AP Photo/Dan Steinberg

Jenna Fischer, Actress (“The Office”)

Actress Jenna Fischer (“The Office”) turns 38 years old today.

AP Photo/Dan Steinberg

1930 Lord Snowdon, Photographer, ex-husband of Princess Margaret, turns 82
1934 Willard Scott, TV personality (“Today”), turns 78
1938 Janet Guthrie, Auto racer, turns 74
1940 Daniel J. Travanti, Actor (“Hill Street Blues”), turns 72
1942 Michael Eisner, Former Walt Disney Co. CEO, turns 70
1946 Peter Wolf, Rock singer (J. Geils Band), turns 66
1950 Franco Harris, Football Hall of Famer, turns 62
1952 Ernie Isley, R&B singer, musician (The Isley Brothers), turns 60
1952 Lynn Swann, Football Hall of Famer, turns 60
1960 Ivan Lendl, Tennis Hall of Famer, turns 52
1962 Taylor Dayne, Rock singer, turns 50
1964 Wanda Sykes, Comedian, actress, turns 48
1968 Jeff Kent, Baseball player, turns 44
1971 Peter Sarsgaard, Actor, turns 41
1980 Laura Prepon, Actress (“That 70s Show”), turns 32

 

Historic Birthdays

Maurice Ravel 3/7/1875 – 12/28/1937 French composer.Go to obituary »
88 Alessandro Manzoni 3/7/1785 – 5/22/1873
Italian poet and novelist
79 Sir John Herschel 3/7/1792 – 5/11/1871
English astronomer
65 Giuseppe Ferrari 3/7/1811 – 6/2/1876
Italian historian and political philosopher
45 Henry Draper 3/7/1837 – 11/20/1882
American physician and amateur astronomer
87 Tomas Masaryk 3/7/1850 – 9/14/1937
Czechoslovakian founder and president
83 Julius Wagner-Jauregg 3/7/1857 – 9/27/1940
Austrian Nobel Prize-winning psychiatrist and neurologist
71 Piet Mondrian 3/7/1872 – 2/1/1944
Dutch abstract art painter
86 Helen Parkhurst 3/7/1887 – 6/1/1973
American educator, author, and lecturer
65 Anna Magnani 3/7/1908 – 9/26/1973
Italian actress

 

 

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March 07

MORNING

“We must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.”
Acts 14:22

God’s people have their trials. It was never designed by God, when he chose his people, that they should be an untried people. They were chosen in the furnace of affliction; they were never chosen to worldly peace and earthly joy. Freedom from sickness and the pains of mortality was never promised them; but when their Lord drew up the charter of privileges, he included chastisements amongst the things to which they should inevitably be heirs. Trials are a part of our lot; they were predestinated for us in Christ’s last legacy. So surely as the stars are fashioned by his hands, and their orbits fixed by him, so surely are our trials allotted to us: he has ordained their season and their place, their intensity and the effect they shall have upon us. Good men must never expect to escape troubles; if they do, they will be disappointed, for none of their predecessors have been without them. Mark the patience of Job; remember Abraham, for he had his trials, and by his faith under them, he became the “Father of the faithful.” Note well the biographies of all the patriarchs, prophets, apostles, and martyrs, and you shall discover none of those whom God made vessels of mercy, who were not made to pass through the fire of affliction. It is ordained of old that the cross of trouble should be engraved on every vessel of mercy, as the royal mark whereby the King’s vessels of honour are distinguished. But although tribulation is thus the path of God’s children, they have the comfort of knowing that their Master has traversed it before them; they have his presence and sympathy to cheer them, his grace to support them, and his example to teach them how to endure; and when they reach “the kingdom,” it will more than make amends for the “much tribulation” through which they passed to enter it.

EVENING

“She called his name Ben-oni (son of sorrow), but his father called him Benjamin (son of my right hand).”
Genesis 35:18

To every matter there is a bright as well as a dark side. Rachel was overwhelmed with the sorrow of her own travail and death; Jacob, though weeping the mother’s loss, could see the mercy of the child’s birth. It is well for us if, while the flesh mourns over trials, our faith triumphs in divine faithfulness. Samson’s lion yielded honey, and so will our adversities, if rightly considered. The stormy sea feeds multitudes with its fishes; the wild wood blooms with beauteous flowerets; the stormy wind sweeps away the pestilence, and the biting frost loosens the soil. Dark clouds distil bright drops, and black earth grows gay flowers. A vein of good is to be found in every mine of evil. Sad hearts have peculiar skill in discovering the most disadvantageous point of view from which to gaze upon a trial; if there were only one slough in the world, they would soon be up to their necks in it, and if there were only one lion in the desert they would hear it roar. About us all there is a tinge of this wretched folly, and we are apt, at times, like Jacob, to cry, “All these things are against me.” Faith’s way of walking is to cast all care upon the Lord, and then to anticipate good results from the worst calamities. Like Gideon’s men, she does not fret over the broken pitcher, but rejoices that the lamp blazes forth the more. Out of the rough oyster-shell of difficulty she extracts the rare pearl of honour, and from the deep ocean-caves of distress she uplifts the priceless coral of experience. When her flood of prosperity ebbs, she finds treasures hid in the sands; and when her sun of delight goes down, she turns her telescope of hope to the starry promises of heaven. When death itself appears, faith points to the light of resurrection beyond the grave, thus making our dying Ben-oni to be our living Benjamin.

 

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Pink Grapefruit: From My Folks' Backyard

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