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♥Inspirationals�?/A> : On this Day: 18 February
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From: MSN NicknameThubtenchokyi1  (Original Message)Sent: 2/27/2006 9:41 AM

On this Day: 18 February

DE VALERA RESIGNS: 18 February 1948

 Ireland  Prime Minister
Eamon de Valera - 9 Mar 1932 - 18 Feb 1948
Eamon de Valera - 13 Jun 1951 -  2 Jun 1954
Eamon de Valera - 20 Mar 1957 - 23 Jun 1959

 Ireland  Minister for Foreign Affairs 
Eamon de Valera - 1933-1948

Ireland  Leaders of FF
Eamon de Valera - 1926-1959

After 16 years as head of independent Ireland, Eamon de Valera steps down as the taoiseach, or Irish prime minister, after his Fianna Fýil Party fails to win a majority in the Dýil ýireann (the Irish assembly). As a result of the general election, the Fianna Fýil won 68 of the 147 seats in the Dýil, and de Valera resigned rather than lead a coalition government. In his place, John A. Costello, leader of the Fine Gael Party, joins with several smaller groups to achieve a majority and becomes Irish prime minister.

Eamon de Valera, the most dominant Irish political figure of the 20th century, was born in New York City in 1882, the son of a Spanish father and Irish mother. When his father died two years later, he was sent to live with his mother's family in County Limerick, Ireland. He attended the Royal University in Dublin and became an important figure in the Irish-language revival movement.

In 1913, he joined the Irish Volunteers, a militant group that advocated Ireland's independence from Britain, and in 1916 participated in the Easter Rising against the British in Dublin.

He was the last Irish rebel leader to surrender and was saved from execution because of his American birth. Imprisoned, he was released in 1917 under a general amnesty and became president of the nationalist Sinn Fýin Party.

In May 1918, he was deported to England and imprisoned again, and in December Sinn Fýin won an Irish national election, making him the unofficial leader of Ireland. In February 1919, he escaped from jail and fled to the United States, where he raised funds for the Irish Republican movement. When he returned to Ireland in 1920, Sinn Fýin and the Irish Republican Army (IRA) were engaged in a widespread and effective guerrilla campaign against British forces.

In 1921, a truce was declared, and in 1922 Arthur Griffith and other former Sinn Fýin leaders broke with de Valera and signed a treaty with Britain, which called for the partition of Ireland, with the south becoming autonomous and the six northern counties of the island remaining part of the United Kingdom. In the period of civil war that followed, de Valera supported the Republicans against the Irish Free State (the
new government of the autonomous south), and was imprisoned by William Cosgrave's Irish Free State ministry.

In 1924, he was released and two years later left Sinn Fýin, which had become the unofficial political wing of the underground movement for northern independence. He formed Fianna Fýil, and in 1932 the party gained control of the Dýil ýireann and de Valera became Irish prime minister.

For the next 16 years, de Valera pursued a policy of political separation from Great Britain, including the introduction of a new constitution in 1937 that declared Ireland the fully sovereign state of ýire. During World War II, he maintained a policy of neutrality but repressed anti-British intrigues within the IRA.

In 1948, he narrowly lost re-election due to a negative public reaction against his party's long monopoly of power. Out of office, he toured the world advocating the unification and independence of Ireland. His successor as taoiseach, John Costello, officially made Ireland an independent republic in 1949 but nonetheless lost the prime minister's office to de Valera in the 1951 election. The relative Irish economic prosperity of the 1940s declined in the 1950s, and Costello began a second ministry in 1954, only to be replaced again by de Valera in 1957.

In 1959, de Valera resigned as prime minister and was elected Irish president �?a largely ceremonial post.

On June 24, 1973, de Valera, then the world's oldest head of state, retired from Irish politics at the age of 90. He passed away two years later.



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From: MSN NicknameThubtenchokyi1Sent: 2/27/2006 9:52 AM

February 18

1964 United States punishes nations for trading with Cuba

 United States Cuba United Kingdom Yugosolvia France 

The United States cuts off military assistance to Britain, France, and Yugoslavia in retaliation for their continuing trade with the communist nation of Cuba. The action was chiefly symbolic, but represented the continued U.S. effort to destabilize the Cuban regime of Fidel Castro.

The amount of aid denied was miniscule �?approximately $100,000 in assistance to each nation. None of the nations indicated that the aid cut-off would affect their trade with Cuba in the least. America's decision to terminate the trade, therefore, hardly had a decisive effect. Many commentators at the time concluded that the U.S. action was largely a result of frustration at not being able to bring down the Castro government.

Since Castro came to power in 1959, the United States had tried various methods to remove him and his communist government.

First, the U.S. severed diplomatic relations and enacted a trade embargo.

In 1961, it unleashed a force of Cuban exiles (which it had armed, trained, and financed) against Castro in the unsuccessful Bay of Pigs invasion.

In 1962, the United States set up a naval blockade around Cuba to prevent the shipment of Soviet missiles to the island. Rumours also flew fast and furious about other U.S. efforts, including talks with the Mafia about assassinating the Cuban leader.

Despite all of these efforts, Castro survived and prospered, simply replacing most U.S. trade and aid with the same from the communist bloc. The American obsession with Castro provoked the New York Times to observe that the U.S. policies toward Cuba "suggest an extraordinary sensitivity that does not in fact correspond to basic policy judgments."

The decision to cut off military assistance to Britain, France, and Yugoslavia did little to help in this regard. The three nations continued their trade with Cuba and expressed their resentment at the U.S. action. Castro stayed in power and rules communist Cuba to this day.

 United States Cuba United Kingdom Yugosolvia France 


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From: MSN NicknameThubtenchokyi1Sent: 2/27/2006 10:08 AM

February 18


Awards

 1929 First Academy Awards announced

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, founded in 1927, announces the winners of the first Academy Awards.

The names were published on the back page of the academy's newsletter, and Variety also published the names, on page 7, a few days later.

Awards were handed out at a banquet in May, which was broadcast live on radio. Although the first awards were for films made in 1927-1928, they weren't announced until February 1929.

Wings won the Best Picture award;

Janice Gaynor won Best Actress 

Emil Jannings won Best Actor

Frank Borzage and Lewis Milestone both won Best Director awards.

The winners received gold statuettes, designed by art director Cedric Gibbons and sculpted by George Stanley. However, the awards weren't nicknamed "Oscars" until 1931, when a secretary at the academy noted the statue's resemblance to her Uncle Oscar, and a journalist printed her remark.

The awards were broadcast on radio until 1953, when the first televised Academy Awards program aired. Since then, the Oscars have become one of the world's most watched television events, drawing as many as one billion viewers worldwide.

Hosts of the award show have included Will Rogers, Jack Benny, Johnny Carson, Billy Crystal, Whoopi Goldberg,...

...and Bob Hope, who hosted the ceremony some 20 times.


1952 Your Show of Shows wins Emmy

Your Show of Shows, a comic variety show featuring Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca, wins the Best Show Emmy in 1952. The program featured 90 minutes of live comedy every week, and was one of the Top 20 most highly rated shows for three of its four years.


1995 Get Smart's last episode

A one-season revival of Get Smart, the 1960s comedy about bumbling secret agent Maxwell Smart, is cancelled after only seven episodes. The original series, developed by Mel Brooks and starring Don Adams, aired from 1965 to 1970.


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