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Originally Posted by Tala
I need coffee.
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I say that every morning. I've become captain of stating the obvious, obviously.
On my 2nd cup now...
ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY:
1775 The American Revolutionary War began with the battles of Lexington and Concord.
1892 The prototype of the first commercially successful American automobile was completed in Springfield, Mass., by Charles E. Duryea and his brother Frank.
1897 The first Boston Marathon was run.
1933 The United States went off the gold standard.
1943 Tens of thousands of Jews living in the Warsaw Ghetto began an uprising against Nazi forces.
1951 Gen. Douglas MacArthur, relieved of his command by President Harry S. Truman, bid farewell to Congress, quoting a line from a ballad: ''Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.''
1989 A gun turret exploded aboard the USS Iowa, killing 47 sailors.
1989 A white female jogger in New York's Central Park was brutally beaten and raped. Five black and Hispanic teenagers were convicted and sent to prison. But the convictions were overturned in 2003 after a serial rapist confessed and DNA evidence tied him to the crime.
1993 A 51-day siege at the Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas, ended when fire destroyed the structure after federal agents smashed their way in. Dozens of people, including sect leader David Koresh, were killed.
1993 South Dakota Gov. George S. Mickelson died in a plane crash in Iowa.
1994 A Los Angeles jury awarded $3.8 million to beaten motorist Rodney King.
On April 19, 1995, a truck bomb exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, and injuring 500. Timothy McVeigh was later convicted of the bombing and sentenced to death.
1997 Flooding from the Red River forced more than 50,000 residents to abandon Grand Forks, N.D.
1998 Poet-philosopher Octavio Paz died at age 84.
1999 The German parliament inaugurated its new home in the restored Reichstag in Berlin, its prewar capital.
2001 The Mel Brooks musical ''The Producers'' opened on Broadway.