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Power Drill & Sweet Husband = Kitchen Under-Cabinet Lighting

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On This Day: April 15

Updated April 14, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On April 15, 1912, the British luxury liner Titanic sank in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland, less than three hours after striking an iceberg. About 1,500 people died.
Go to article »

On April 15, 1889, A. Philip Randolph, American civil rights leader and trade unionist, was born. Following his death on May 16, 1979, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1850 The city of San Francisco was incorporated.
1861 President Abraham Lincoln declared a state of insurrection and called out Union troops three days after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter in South Carolina.
1865 President Abraham Lincoln died nine hours after being shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater in Washington. Andrew Johnson became the 17th president.
1945 British and Canadian troops liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
1947 Jackie Robinson became baseball’s first black major league player when he debuted with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
1980 Existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre died in Paris at age 74.
1986 The United States launched an air raid against Libya in response to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April 5; Libya said 37 people, mostly civilians, were killed.
1989 Students in Beijing launched pro-democracy protests upon the death of former Communist Party leader Hu Yaobang.
2000 Cal Ripken Jr. of the Baltimore Orioles became the 24th major league player to reach 3,000 hits.
2002 Retired Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White died at age 84.
2010 Civil rights leader Benjamin Hooks, one-time executive director of the NAACP, died in Memphis, Tenn. at age 85.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Seth Rogen, Actor, writer (“Knocked Up,” “Superbad”)

Actor-writer Seth Rogen (“Knocked Up,” “Superbad”) turns 30 years old today.

AP Photo/Matt Sayles

Emma Watson, Actress (“Harry Potter” movies)

Actress Emma Watson (“Harry Potter” movies) turns 22 years old today.

AP Photo/Jonathan Short

1933 Roy Clark, Country musician, turns 79
1944 Dave Edmunds, Rock musician, turns 68
1947 Linda Bloodworth- Thomason, TV writer, producer (“Designing Women”), turns 65
1951 Heloise, Columnist (Hints from Heloise), turns 61
1959 Emma Thompson, Actress, turns 53
1966 Samantha Fox, Singer, turns 46

 

Historic Birthdays

A. Philip Randolph 4/15/1889 – 5/16/1979 American civil rights leader and trade unionist.Go to obituary »
76 Leonhard Euler 4/15/1707 – 9/18/1783
Swiss mathematician and physicist
86 Charles Willson Peale 4/15/1741 – 2/22/1827
American portrait painter of leading American Revolution figures
90 Walter Channing 4/15/1786 – 7/27/1876
American physician; helped found Boston Lying-In Hospital (1832)
73 Henry James 4/15/1843 – 2/28/1916
American-English novelist
83 Johannes Stark 4/15/1874 – 6/21/1957
German Nobel Prize-winning physicist (1919)
67 Leonardo da Vinci 4/15/1452 – 5/2/1519
Italian artist, architect, scientist, inventor and engineer
63 Max Wertheimer 4/15/1880 – 10/12/1943
Czech-born American psychologist; founder of Gestalt psychology
84 Stanley Bruce 4/15/1883 – 8/25/1967
Australian statesman and diplomat; prime minister (1923-29)
86 Thomas Hart Benton 4/15/1889 – 1/19/1975
American painter associated with the American Regionalists of the 1930’s
44 Arshile Gorky 4/15/1904 – 7/21/1948
Turkish-born American postsurrealist abstract painter
81 Nikolaas Tinbergen 4/15/1907 – 12/21/1988
Dutch-born English zoologist and ethologist; won Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1973)
65 Harold Washington 4/15/1922 – 11/25/1987
American politician; first African-American mayor of Chicago
42 Bessie Smith 4/15/1895 – 9/26/1937
American blues singer

 

 

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April 15

MORNING

“The precious blood of Christ.”
1 Peter 1:19

Standing at the foot of the cross, we see hands, and feet, and side, all distilling crimson streams of precious blood. It is “precious” because of its redeeming and atoning efficacy. By it the sins of Christ’s people are atoned for; they are redeemed from under the law; they are reconciled to God, made one with him. Christ’s blood is also “precious” in its cleansing power; it “cleanseth from all sin.” “Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.” Through Jesus’ blood there is not a spot left upon any believer, no wrinkle nor any such thing remains. O precious blood, which makes us clean, removing the stains of abundant iniquity, and permitting us to stand accepted in the Beloved, notwithstanding the many ways in which we have rebelled against our God. The blood of Christ is likewise “precious” in its preserving power. We are safe from the destroying angel under the sprinkled blood. Remember it is God’s seeing the blood which is the true reason for our being spared. Here is comfort for us when the eye of faith is dim, for God’s eye is still the same. The blood of Christ is “precious” also in its sanctifying influence. The same blood which justifies by taking away sin, does in its after-action, quicken the new nature and lead it onward to subdue sin and to follow out the commands of God. There is no motive for holiness so great as that which streams from the veins of Jesus. And “precious,” unspeakably precious, is this blood, because it has an overcoming power. It is written, “They overcame through the blood of the Lamb.” How could they do otherwise? He who fights with the precious blood of Jesus, fights with a weapon which cannot know defeat. The blood of Jesus! sin dies at its presence, death ceases to be death: heaven’s gates are opened. The blood of Jesus! we shall march on, conquering and to conquer, so long as we can trust its power!

EVENING

“And his hands were steady until the going down of the sun.”
Exodus 17:12

So mighty was the prayer of Moses, that all depended upon it. The petitions of Moses discomfited the enemy more than the fighting of Joshua. Yet both were needed. So, in the soul’s conflict, force and fervour, decision and devotion, valour and vehemence, must join their forces, and all will be well. You must wrestle with your sin, but the major part of the wrestling must be done alone in private with God. Prayer, like Moses’, holds up the token of the covenant before the Lord. The rod was the emblem of God’s working with Moses, the symbol of God’s government in Israel. Learn, O pleading saint, to hold up the promise and the oath of God before him. The Lord cannot deny his own declarations. Hold up the rod of promise, and have what you will.

Moses grew weary, and then his friends assisted him. When at any time your prayer flags, let faith support one hand, and let holy hope uplift the other, and prayer seating itself upon the stone of Israel, the rock of our salvation, will persevere and prevail. Beware of faintness in devotion; if Moses felt it, who can escape? It is far easier to fight with sin in public, than to pray against it in private. It is remarked that Joshua never grew weary in the fighting, but Moses did grow weary in the praying; the more spiritual an exercise, the more difficult it is for flesh and blood to maintain it. Let us cry, then, for special strength, and may the Spirit of God, who helpeth our infirmities, as he allowed help to Moses, enable us like him to continue with our hands steady “until the going down of the sun;” till the evening of life is over; till we shall come to the rising of a better sun in the land where prayer is swallowed up in praise.