THE PARDO PUSH

                  On March 10, 1967, F-4 Phantom fighter pilot Capt. Bob Pardo was on a mission to bomb a steel mill north of Hanoi.  Fellow pilot Earl Aman was hit by flak in his fuel tank. Pardo’s jet was also hit, in the wing.  Aman would not make it back Read more…

VERGINIA

                In 451 B.C., a Roman patrician named Appius Claudius fell in lust for a plebeian woman named Verginia (also spelled Virginia). She was the daughter of an esteemed centurion named Verginius and betrothed to Lucius Icilius.  Gifts and bribes would not woo the girl, so Claudius turned to subterfuge.  Read more…

ANNA COLEMAN LADD

                Anna Coleman Watts was born on July 15, 1878 in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.  She studied sculpture in Paris and Rome.  Her first important work was called “Triton’s Babies”.  In was displayed at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco in 1915.  It is now part of a fountain in Boston.  Read more…

THE RULE OF “KING MOB” BEGINS

                The most raucous inauguration in American History was that of Andrew Jackson on March 4, 1829.  “Old Hickory” was the first common person to be elected President.  By common, I am referring to his birth, not his personality.  His election in 1828 was symbolic of the expansion of democracy Read more…

MASADA

                Masada was a fortress on a plateau in the middle of a desert in what is today Israel.  It was built by Herod the Great and had everything necessary to withstand a long siege.  After the Romans put down the Jewish Rebellion (66-73 A.D.), some rebels held out.  A Read more…