Thursday, 20 January 2022

Brigham Young Born in Vermont in 1801

Brigham Young Born in Vermont in 1801 to a Protestant family, Brigham Young, carpenter, painter, and glazier, joined the Mormons in Ohio in 1832. He took charge of the great migration west from Illinois in 1846, arriving in Salt Lake City in 1847. In 1849 he established the territory of Deseret, which encompassed present-day Utah. “Deseret” means “Honeybee” in the Book of Mormon and symbolizes industry. Young’s vision and organizational skills helped the settlers turn the desert into fruitful farmland. During his long life, he had several disputes with the federal government, whose authority he both resisted and recognized. Despite being removed from political office in 1857, Young was head of the Mormon church until his death in 1877.



Bishan Bedi and EAS Prasanna all over the VCA Cricket ground.

A pencil-thin college student once thrashed Bishan Bedi and EAS Prasanna all over the VCA Cricket ground. Things were different then, and Ranji Trophy was a star-studded affair.

 

Reading Room and Reference Library at the Central Lending Library, Birmingham.

The Reading Room and Reference Library at the Central Lending Library, Birmingham. This grand building was demolished in 1974


Ali and Frazier taken in 2003.

Ali and Frazier took in 2003. Three decades earlier these men were champions of the world but age had taken its toll. A remarkable portrait by Walter Iooss Jr.

 

America’s Back Yard

 Muera Nixon! Death to Nixon!

A barricade blocked the road. The car rocked wildly as the chanting mob tried to overturn it. Rocks and iron bars thudded against its roof and shattered its windows. Inside the car, Richard Nixon Vice President of the United States was in great danger.

It was May 13, 1958, in Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. Nixon was visiting the city as part of a goodwill tour of Latin America. But he found only hatred on the streets of Caracas. Nixon's life was saved when a truck forced its way through the barricade and his car was able to accelerate away. When news of the attack reached the United States the American people were shocked and angry. But it made them realize how much some Latin Americans hated and resented their country.

Latin America is the name given to the mainly Spanish-speaking countries which lie to the south of the United States. Ever since the early 19th century, the United States has taken a special interest in what happens in these countries. They are its closest neighbors and so it is important to the safety of the United States to make sure that no foreign enemies gain influence in them.

In the past, this has often meant that the rulers of these Latin American countries have been little more than American puppets. Their agriculture and industry have frequently been American-controlled too. A classic example was Cuba. Up to the I950’s its railroads, banks, electricity industry and many of its biggest farms were all American-owned.

In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt promised that the United States would respect the right of Latin American countries to control their own affairs. He called this the "good neighbor" policy. I would dedicate this nation to the policy of the good neighbor, said "The neighbor who respects the rights of others."

Roosevelt ordered to me the American soldiers and officials who had been running the affairs of Latin American countries at one time or another for much of the past 30 years. Nicaragua, for example, had been occupied by American troops from 1912 to 1933. He also gave up the United States' claim to interfere ill Panama and Cuba whenever it wanted.

But many Latin Americans were not convinced by Roosevelt's talk about being a good neighbor. True the American troops had gone home. But the rulers who took over when the soldiers left the Somoza family who held power in Nicaragua from 1937 to 1979, for example usually did what the Americans expected of' them.

The Second World War brought better times for Latin America. All the raw materials that it could produce- copper, tin, oil, and countless others were used by the wartime factories of the United States. The result was more money and more jobs -, but also even more American control.

Sunday, 3 October 2021

Gustav Stresemann, German foreign minister

3 Oct 1929, Gustav Stresemann, German foreign minister 1923-1929 during Weimar Republic, died, aged 51. French foreign minister Aristide Briand, awarded Nobel Prize for Peace in 1926 for the policy of reconciliation & negotiation. What might have happened if he’d lived in the 1930s?



 

Max von Baden

3 Oct 1918, Max von Baden (1867-1929), prince, general & politician, appointed German Chancellor. Had worked for POWs welfare & opposed unrestricted submarine warfare. Sued for peace on Germany's behalf, approved Kaiser's removal & transferred power to SPD’s Friedrich Ebert. 

Indian PM Lal Bahadur Shastri arrived at Tashkent for peace talks with Pakistan mediated by the USSR.

In January 1966, Indian PM Lal Bahadur Shastri arrived at Tashkent for peace talks with Pakistan mediated by the USSR. Tashkent in January was brutally cold. Shastri Ji only had his khadi woolen coat with him as a warm garment. Soviet premier Alexei Kosigyn observed this and felt that the Indian PM must be uncomfortable in the extreme cold. He ordered a Russian overcoat to be gifted to Shastri ji. At a formal function, he presented the coat to Shastri Ji as a mark of respect. Next day, Kosigyn noted Shastri ji was still wearing his khadi coat. A bit perplexed, he asked the prime minister what happened during a break in official events. Kosigyn was worried that Shastri Ji hadn't liked the present.