149 years ago today, the British hunter, naturalist, and author, Jim Corbett was born. He was often hired by various Indian legislatures to hunt man-eating Bengal tigers and leopards. He became so well-versed in the mysteries and magic of India’s jungles that he helped create the nation’s first national park, renamed Corbett National Park in his honor. READ more about his philanthropy and legacy… (1875)nnnn
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- Another section of the Sinai Peninsula was peacefully returned by Israel to Egypt (1979)
- After generations of hostility, Jordan’s King Hussein and Israeli Prime Minister
- Lance Armstrong won his first Tour de France, after being given the grave diagnosis of testicular cancer (1999)
- Pratibha Patil was sworn in as India’s first woman president (2007)
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n nnAlso, on this day in 1978, English-born Louise Joy Brown became the first human to be born after conception by in vitro fertilization.nn
nnHer parents, Lesley and John Brown, had been trying to conceive for nine years after maternal complications from blocked fallopian tubes. The year before giving birth at Oldham General Hospital, she underwent a procedure developed by Patrick Steptoe and Robert Edwards—who was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Medicine for this work. Although the media referred to Brown as a “test tube baby”, her conception actually took place in a Petri dish.nnAnd, on this day in 1965, folk singer Bob Dylan walked onstage at the Newport Folk Festival, plugged in his 1964 Fender Stratocaster and “went electric,” tearing into the song “Maggie’s Farm.” Although some folkie audience members booed, nothing would stop the leather-clad Dylan from becoming one of rock’s rebel geniuses. Dylan, who was expected by fans to ‘save’ folk music from being overtaken by rock-and-roll, would later say that he was already a fan of The Beatles and the first time he heard them he knew “they were pointing to the direction where music had to go.” …WATCH the moment below… (Learn More in these books and videos.)nn[raw][/raw]nn nnAnd, 34 years ago today, Diana, Princess of Wales, used her royal clout to officially open the new AIDS Center in London. Much to the chagrin of the Queen, who wanted her to support “something more pleasant”, she arrived at the Landmark Aids Centre, which offers treatment and support for HIV/AIDS patients, and gave director Jonathan Grimshaw — diagnosed HIV positive — a firm handshake before touring the building. She was not averse to making physical contact with the patients, though it was early in the history of the epidemic, and no one knew how the disease was spread—and police still wore rubber gloves when dealing with patients.nn

nnIn his inaugural, after receiving 95 percent of the votes in the Electoral College, he said:nn“That the nation has found a consensus for its highest office in someone who has sprung from the grassroots of our society and grown up in the dust and heat of this sacred land is symbolic of the fact that the concerns of the common man have now moved to the center stage of our social and political life.”nnHe previously served as India’s ambassador to multiple countries and was referred to by Nehru as “the best diplomat of the country”. He described himself as a “working president” and urged the public to struggle against power corporations and militarism and fight those aspects of globalization that were against the interests of the people. (1997)nnSHARE the Milestones, Memories, and Music…

