Joseph Barbera

 




Synopsis

 

Joseph Barbera was born March 24, 1911 in New York City. In 1936, he found work at the MGM studios. In 1938, he joined forces with William Hanna. Barbera and Hanna took charge of MGM's animation division from 1955 to 1957. After this, the duo formed H-B Enterprises, which became Hanna-Barbera Productions. By the late 1960s, they dominated the TV animation scene with hits like the Flintstones.


Profile

 

Animator, Cartoon Artist, Director, Producer. Joseph Roland Barbera was born on March 24, 1911 in the Little Italy neighborhood of New York City. He spent his childhood in Flatbush, Brooklyn and when he was old enough, found a job as a tailor's delivery boy.

In 1932, he took a job at the Van Beuren Studio as an animator and scriptwriter. At Van Beuren, he worked on cartoons such as Cubby Bear and Rainbow Parades. When Van Beuren shut its doors in 1936, Barbera found work at the MGM studios. 1937 found him working, in California, for the new MGM cartoon unit. In 1938, he joined forces with William Hanna to direct short cartoons; Barbera was the storyboard and layout artist while Hanna was in charge of timing. Their first collaboration was a Tom and Jerry film titled "Puss Gets the Boot," released in 1940.

Barbera and Hanna took charge of MGM's animation division from 1955 until the unit was shut down in 1957. After this, the duo formed H-B Enterprises, which became Hanna-Barbera Productions. By the late 1960s, Hanna-Barbera dominated the television animation scene, masterminding hit television series such as Scooby-Doo, The Jetsons, Jonny Quest, and The Flintstones.

Hanna-Barbera was part of Taft Broadcasting from 1967 through 1991, when it was sold to Turner Broadcasting. The partners stayed on as consultants and worked on new shows. Their reign in television animation garnered them Academy Award nominations and well as many Emmy Awards. William Hanna died in 2001, but Barbera remained active until his own death on December 18, 2006. Joseph Hanna died of natural causes at his home in Studio City, California. He was 95 years old.

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David Baltimore

 


Quick Facts

  • NAME: David Baltimore
  • OCCUPATION: Scientist
  • BIRTH DATE: March 07, 1938 (Age: 75)
  • EDUCATION: Swarthmore College, Rockefeller Institute, MIT
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: New York, New York 
  • ZODIAC SIGN: Pisces 

Profile

 

David Baltimore proved an exception to the 'central dogma' of genetic theory, which states that the information encoded in genes always flows unidirectionally from DNA to RNA and cannot be reversed. Since its discovery, reverse transcriptase has become an invaluable tool in recombinant DNA technology. For his work, Bailey shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1975.

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Baby Jessica

 


Synopsis

 

Jessica McClure Morales ("Baby Jessica") became famous in 1987 when at 18 months old she fell down a 22 foot well in her aunt's backyard. She remained trapped in the well for 58 hours, while America watched on CNN, before being rescued.


Sudden Fame

 

Remembered worldwide as "Baby Jessica," Jessica McClure Morales was born March 26, 1986 in the oil city of Midland, Texas. She was born to teenage parents, Reba "Cissy" McClure and Lewis "Chip" McClure, who had fallen on hard times in the depths of the Texas oil bust of the mid-1980s.


The first 18 months of Baby Jessica's life passed without the world at large taking much notice. Then, on the morning of Wednesday, October 14, 1987, she suddenly became the most famous child in the country. Jessica's aunt Jamie Moore ran a daycare center out of her home, where that morning Jessica was playing with four other children in the backyard under the supervision of her mother, Cissy, who briefly went inside to answer a phone call, leaving the children momentarily unattended. Minutes later she heard the kids screaming and rushed back outside to find that her daughter had disappeared. She soon discovered that Baby Jessica had fallen into an eight-inch diameter well and become trapped deep down in its shaft. How exactly Baby Jessica fell into the well remains unclear. According to her mother, the opening had been covered up by a heavy rock to prevent just such an accident. "I didn't know what to do," Cissy McClure later recalled. "I just ran in and called the police. They were there within three minutes, but it felt like a lifetime."


Baby Jessica remained trapped in the well, 22 feet below ground, for the next 58 hours, while frantic rescue crews attempted to save her life and the entire nation watched transfixed as the drama played out on television. Because she had fallen so deep into the earth—beneath layers of rock harder than granite—and because the diameter of the well was so narrow, the rescue mission was extraordinarily difficult. Using a large rat-hole rig, a machine normally used to plant telephone poles in the ground, rescue teams drilled a 30-inch wide, 29-foot deep hole parallel to the well. They then began the difficult process of drilling a horizontal tunnel between the two wells about two feet below where Baby Jessica was trapped.


In the meantime, rescue workers pumped oxygen into the well and attempted to maintain constant communication with Baby Jessica, who moaned, wailed and for a while even sang nursery rhymes to pass the time. "After listening to her for so long, I could tell her moods," a detective on the scene recalled. "At one point she was singing. At another point, when a jackhammer started up, she didn't say any words but used kind of a huffy little voice. You could tell it was an angry voice. I would say 80 percent of the time she was either crying or making some kind of noise we could hear. When we weren't calling words of encouragement, we'd tell her to sing for us. I'll never forget her singing 'Winnie-the-Pooh.'"


The entire rescue ordeal was covered live on CNN, the nation's first—and at that time only—24-hour news network. For only the second time in American history (the first being the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger a year earlier) the entire nation watched literally around-the-clock as a dramatic news story unfolded live on television. Dubbed "everybody's baby," Baby Jessica tugged at heartstrings of millions of viewers; thousands of strangers sent her family flowers, toys,cards and money. Donations, totaling in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, were set aside in a trust fund for her to inherit at the age of 25. In fact, many point to CNN's coverage of Baby Jessica's rescue as a turning point in the history of news media, the genesis of the era of the 24-hour news cycle.


Finally, on the evening of Friday, October 16, Baby Jessica was lifted safely out of the well. The Pulitzer prize-winning photograph of her rescue, snapped by Scott Shaw, shows Baby Jessica cradled in the arms of a paramedic, her head wrapped in white gauze, her arms caked in dirt, her bleary eyes just barely open. Over the next few years, Baby Jessica underwent 15 surgeries to treat all of the complications from her three days trapped without food or water inside a dirty, 8-inch wide well. She ultimately did regain full health. Chronic but controllable rheumatoid arthritis, a missing small toe on her right foot and a prominent diagonal scar across her forehead are the only permanent physical signs of her ordeal.

Later Life

 

Once she grew older, Baby Jessica did not remember anything about her three days trapped in a well in her aunt's backyard or her lengthy recovery. She did not even learn her own story until she was five years old and saw an episode of Rescue 911, recounting the story of a baby girl's rescue from a well three years earlier. Moved to tears by the story, she asked her stepmother (her parents had since divorced) what the girl's name was and learned it was her.


Ever since those dramatic three days in 1987, Jessica McClure Morales has lived an extraordinarily ordinary life. She graduated from Greenwood High School outside Midland in 2004, and in 2006 she married a man named Daniel Morales. She has two children, Simon and Sheyenne, and stays home to care for them. On March 26, 2011, her 25th birthday, Morales gained access to her trust fund, now worth approximately 800,000 dollars, which she plans to save for her children's college education. Morales does not often speak about her rescue, and in a recent interview she insisted it has had very little impact on her life. "Couldn't cage me then, why should it cage me now?" she asked rhetorically. And while people who recognize her by the scar on the forehead still call her "Baby Jessica," Morales says the name does not bother her. "Like they told Lil' Bow Wow, you'll never get rid of the 'little' part," she said. Cause you'll always be what you are remembered as."

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Diane Arbus

 

Quick Facts

  • NAME: Diane Arbus
  • OCCUPATION: Photographer
  • BIRTH DATE: March 14, 1923
  • DEATH DATE: July 26, 1971
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: New York, New York 
  • PLACE OF DEATH: New York, New York 

Synopsis

 

Diane Nemerov was born on March 14, 1923. An artistic youth, she learned photography from her husband Allan Arbus. Together, they found success with fashion work, but soon Diane branched out on her own. Her raw, unusual images of the people she saw while

Profile

 

Photographer. Born Diane Nemerov on March 14, 1923, in New York, New York. Diane Arbus was one of the most distinctive photographers in the twentieth century, known for her eerie portraits and offbeat subjects. Her artistic talents emerged at a young age; she was created interesting drawings and paintings while in high school. She married Allan Arbus in 1941 who taught her photography.

Working with her husband, Diane Arbus started out in advertising and fashion photography. They became quite a successful team with photographs appearing in such magazines as Vogue. In the late 1950s, she began to focus on her own photography. To further her art, Arbus studied with photographer Lisette Model around this time. She began to pursue taking photographs of people she found during her wanderings around New York City. She visited seedy hotels, public parks, a morgue, and other various locales. These unusual images had a raw quality and several of them found their way in the July 1960 issue of Esquire magazine. These photographs were a spring board for more work for Arbus.

By the mid-1960s, Diane Arbus was a well-established photographer, participating in shows at the Museum of Modern Art in New York among other places. She was known for going to great lengths to get the shots she wanted. She became friends with many other famous photographers, such as Richard Avedon and Walker Evans.

While professionally Arbus continued to thrive in the late 1960s, she had some personal challenges. Her marriage ended in 1969, and she later struggled with depression. She committed suicide in her New York apartment on July 26, 1971. Her work remains a subject of intense interest, and her life was part of the basis of the 2006 film, Fur, starring Nicole Kidman as Arbus.



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Howard H. Aiken

 


 

Quick Facts

  • NAME: Howard H. Aiken
  • OCCUPATION: Inventor, Physicist
  • BIRTH DATE: March 09, 1900
  • DEATH DATE: March 14, 1973
  • EDUCATION: University of Wisconsin-Madison, Harvard University
  • PLACE OF BIRTH: Hoboken, New Jersey
  • PLACE OF DEATH: St. Louis, Missouri

 

 

Profile

Born in Hoboken, NJ in 1900, Howard H. Aiken was a U.S. mathematician and inventor who, with three other engineers, developed the first automatic calculating machine. The machine was called the Harvard Mark I and could perform five operations: add, subtract, multiple, divide, and reference previous result. This incredible 1944 invention was 51 feet long, 8 feet high, and weighed 35 tons.

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Emilio Aguinaldo

 



Synopsis

 

Revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo was born March 23, 1869 in Cavite, Philippines. In 1898 he achieved independence of the Philippines from Spain and was elected the first president of the new republic under the Malolos Congress. He also led the Philippine-American War against U.S. resistance to Philippine independence. He died of a heart attack on February 6, 1964 in Quezon City, Philippines.


Early Life

 

Emilio Aguinaldo was born March 23, 1869 in Kawit, Cavite Province, Philippines. Nicknamed Miong, he was the seventh of eight children. His parents were of Chinese and Tagalog descent. His father, Carlos, died when Aguinaldo was just nine years old. Widowed, his mother, Trinidad, sent him to attend public school in Manila.

After graduating from the University of Santo Thomas in Manila, Aguinaldo returned home to Kawit, where he developed a growing awareness of Filipino frustration with Spanish colonial rule.
While serving as the head of barter in Manila, he joined the Pilar Lodge chapter of the Freemasonry in 1895. The Freemasonry was a government- and church-banned resistance group. It was through his role as municipal captain of this fraternity that Aguinaldo met Andres Bonifacio, a key figure in the fight to overthrow Spanish rule.


Independence From Spain

 

Eager to fight for the cause of Philippine independence, in 1895 Aguinaldo took up with a secret society of revolutionaries headed by fellow lodge member Andres Bonifacio. When a rival faction executed Bonifacio in 1897, Aguinaldo assumed total leadership of the revolution against Spain.

By December 1897, Aguinaldo had managed to reach the Truce of Biak-na-Bato with Spain. He and his rebels agreed to a surrendering of arms and accepted exile to Hong Kong in exchange for amnesty, indemnity and liberal reform. However, neither side kept up their end of the bargain. The Spanish government did not deliver in full all that was promised, and the rebels did not truly surrender arms. In fact, Aguinaldo's revolutionaries used some of Spain's financial compensation to purchase additional arms for the resistance. From Hong Kong, Aguinaldo also made arrangements to assist Americans fighting against Spain in the Spanish-American War. As neither peace nor independence had been achieved, in 1898 Aguinaldo returned to the Philippines to resume his rebellion against Spanish rule.

Back in Cavite, Aguinaldo forcibly set up a provisional dictatorship. After meeting with the Malolos Congress and drafting a constitution for a new republic, on June 12, 1898, Aguinaldo at last declared Philippine independence. Announced from his home town of Kawit, Aguinaldo's proclamation put an end to four centuries of Philippine oppression under Spanish Colonial rule. In January of the next year, dressed in a white suit at Barasoain Church in Malolos City, Aguinaldo was sworn in as the first president of the new, self-governed Philippine republic.


Philippine-American War

 

The United States, however, was not eager to accept the Philippines' new government.While the U.S. and Spain had been fighting the Spanish-American War, the Philippines had been ceded by Spain to the United States in the Treaty of Paris in December 1898.Just two weeks after Aguinaldo's inauguration, an American sentry killed a Philippine soldier stationed at the San Juan Bridge, in a gesture of resistance against the newfound Philippine independence. On February 4, 1899,The Philippine-American War exploded into action. Aguinaldo's revolutionaries quickly resorted to guerilla tactics, resulting in one of the bloodiest wars in American history, but in little direct progress for Aguinaldo and his cause. Concerning the apparent futility of his efforts in war, Aguinaldo said, "I saw my own soldiers die without affecting future events."

After three years at war, Aguinaldo was captured by American General Frederick Funston on March 23, 1901. After swearing an oath of allegiance to the United States, on April 19, 1901, Aguinaldo officially declared peace with the United States. By this time, the United States was ready support Philippine independence. Friendly relations, along with an American civil government, were established. Aguinaldo retreated to a private life as a farmer but never forgot the men who fought alongside him. In their honor, he would later establish the Veterans of the Revolution, an organization that arranged their pensions, as well as affordable payment plans for land purchases.

Aguinaldo took another stab at politics when he ran for presidency in 1935 against Manuel Quezon but lost. In 1950 he became a presidential advisor on the Council of State.

Death

 

Emilio Aguinaldo died of a heart attack at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Quezon City, Philippines, on February 6, 1964. His private land and mansion, which he had donated the prior year, continue to serve as a shrine to both the revolution for Philippine independence and the revolutionary himself.





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