Today's Motto: 'Leaders always keep both, challenge and hope firmly in view' - News On Radar India
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Today’s Motto: ‘Leaders always keep both, challenge and hope firmly in view’

As Every Day makes a new beginning in life, it brings new opportunities, opens new avenues, to perform and make a mark, to write a Page in History Book

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This is Your Day-TODAY: Take a Determined Step Forward and Make History! 

On this day,  May 24,……..

1830 – “Mary Had a Little Lamb” by Sarah Josepha Hale is published. (It is an original poem by Sarah Josepha Hale and was inspired by an actual incident. As a young girl, Mary Sawyer {later Mary Tyler} kept a pet lamb that she took to school one day at the suggestion of her brother. This expectedly led to a commotion. Mary recalled: “Visiting school that morning was a young man by the name of John Roulstone. The young man was very much pleased with the incident of the lamb; and the next day he rode across the fields on horseback to the little old schoolhouse and handed me a slip of paper which had written upon it the three original stanzas of the poem…” {There are two competing theories on the origin of this poem. One holds that Roulstone wrote the first four lines and that the final twelve lines, less childlike than the first, were composed by Sarah Josepha Hale; the other is that Hale was responsible for the entire poem}).

1844 – Samuel F.B. Morse transmitted the message, “What hath God wrought!” from the U.S. Supreme Court room Washington D.C. to his partner, Alfred Vail, in the Mount Clare station of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. Vail responded by retransmitting the same message back to Morse. Thus, Morse formally opened America’s first telegraph line, an event that inaugurated America’s telegraph industry.

1862 – A field telegraph was used for the first time in U.S. warfare. This was the time of the American Civil War. An army General’s headquarters was connected by wire to an advance guard several miles away.

1862 – The first trial run of a train was made in London through the Metropolitan underground line, the world’s first underground passenger railway.

1892 – Thomas A. Edison was issued three patents for an “Electric Locomotive” and a fourth patent relating to an “Electric Railway”.

1938 – A U.S. patent was issued for a Coin Controlled Parking Meter to Carl C. McGee of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

1940 – Igor Sikorsky performs the first successful single-rotor helicopter flight.

1991 – The body of Rajiv Gandhi was cremated in New Delhi. (His two children being too young, there was pressure for Sonia Gandhi to succeed her husband, but she refused).

1993 – Eritrea achieved independence from Ethiopia after 30-year civil war.

2018 – At least 14 children reportedly mauled to death by wild dogs near Khairabad, India after closure of slaughterhouses.

2018 – US President Donald Trump posthumously pardons boxer Jack Johnson for racially orientated criminal conviction – transporting a white woman across state lines (East Texas History).

2022 – Leaders of the Quad nations, America, Australia, India and Japan meet in Tokyo, focusing on Chinese aggressions in the Indo-Pacific.

2023 – Man with paralysis walks naturally for the first time in 12 years after a Swiss team created a neurological link between the brain and spinal cord, findings published in “Nature”.

Born….

1686 – Gabriel Fahrenheit, inventor of the alcohol thermometer (1709) and mercury thermometer (1714). He also developed the Fahrenheit temperature scale.

1955 – Rajesh Roshan, popular music director. Son of legendary music director Roshan, brother of veteran actors Rakesh Roshan and uncle of Hrithik Roshan. His music renditions  in Kaho Na Pyaar Hai, Koi Mil Gaya, Karan Arjun, Krish series etc. were immiediate hit. (pic credit-Wikipedia).

1965 – Rajdeep Sardesai, a senior journalist. Son of legendary cricket Dilip Sardesai. Anchor, Editor of India Today Television and earlier Global Broadcast News group. (pic credit-OpIndia)

RIP….

1999 – Noted wrestling coach Dronacharya awardee Guru Hanuman; passed away in a road accident near Meerut.

2000 – Majrooh Sultanpuri, a revolutionary poet and songwriter. Real name Asrar Ul Hassan Khan, he changed it to ‘Majrooh’, which means ‘wounded’ and suffixed it with the place he was from in UP. Starting with ‘Shajahan’ he wrote lyrics for over 300 films. The song ‘Chahunga main tujhe saanjh savere’ from ‘Dosti’, won him the first and only Filmfare Award. (One of his most famous verse was ‘Main akela hee chala tha janib-e manzil magar, log saath aate gaye aur caravan banta gaya’.  (pic credit-Mumbai Mirro r).

You may have known….

The low pressure and humidity in airplanes changes the sensitivity of people’s taste buds, so airlines food is made sweeter and saltier than normal.

                                                                                                                                             {Compiled by Lt. Gen. (R) Raj Kadyan}

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