Red Bluff Daily News

May 15, 2012

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4B Daily News – Tuesday, May 15, 2012 PEANUTS® MONDAY COMICS By Charles Schultz Today in History By The Associated Press Today is Monday, May 14, the 135th day of 2012. There are 231 days left in the year. Today's Highlight in History: On May 14, 1912, the first movie inspired by the Titanic DILBERT® By Scott Adams disaster was released just a month after the British liner sank. ''Saved From the Titanic,'' a one-reel drama produced by the Eclair Film Co. of Fort Lee, N.J., starred Dorothy Gibson, an actress who had been an actual passenger on the doomed ship; she wore for the movie the same outfit she was wearing when rescued. (''Saved From the Titanic'' is considered lost, the only known copies having been destroyed in a fire in 1914.) In 1643, Louis XIV became King of France at age four upon the death of his father, Louis XIII. In 1796, English physician Edward Jenner inoculated 8- On this date: year-old James Phipps against smallpox by using cowpox matter. GARFIELD® By Jim Davis In 1804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the Louisiana Territory as well as the Pacific Northwest left camp near present-day Hartford, Ill. In 1811, Paraguay achieved independence from Spain with the bloodless overthrow of the country's royal governor. In 1900, the Olympic games opened in Paris, held as part of the 1900 World's Fair. In 1942, Aaron Copland's ''Lincoln Portrait'' was first performed by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. In 1948, according to the current-era calendar, the inde- pendent state of Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv. In 1961, Freedom Riders were attacked by violent mobs in Anniston and Birmingham, Ala. In 1962, the Anthony Burgess novel ''A Clockwork SHOE By Chris Cassatt and Gary Brookins Orange,'' set in a dystopian future England, was first pub- lished by London publisher Heinemann. Prince Juan Carlos, the future king of Spain, married Princess Sophia of Greece and Denmark in Athens. 68. In 1973, the United States launched Skylab 1, its first manned space station. In 1987, actress Rita Hayworth died in New York at age BLONDIE® By Dean Young and Stan Drake BEETLE BAILEY® By Mort Walker HAGAR the Horrible® By Chris Browne One year ago: At New York's John F. Kennedy Interna- tional Airport, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the Inter- national Monetary Fund and potential candidate for president of France, was removed from a Paris-bound plane and charged with sexually assaulting a Manhattan hotel maid, Nafissatou Diallo. (Strauss-Kahn later resigned; the charges against him were eventually dropped.) Today's Birthdays: Opera singer Patrice Munsel is 87. Photo-realist artist Richard Estes is 80. Former Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., is 70. Rock singer-musician Jack Bruce (Cream) is 69. Movie producer George Lucas is 68. Actress Meg Foster is 64. Movie director Robert Zemeckis is 61. Rock singer David Byrne is 60. Actor Tim Roth is 51. Rock singer Ian Astbury (The Cult) is 50. Rock musician C.C. (aka Cecil) DeVille is 50. Actor Danny Huston is 50. Rock musi- cian Mike Inez (Alice In Chains) is 46. Fabrice Morvan (ex- Milli Vanilli) is 46. Rhythm-and-blues singer Raphael Saadiq is 46. Actress Cate Blanchett is 43. Singer Danny Wood (New Kids on the Block) is 43. Movie writer-director Sofia Coppola (KOH'-pah-lah) is 41. Thought for Today: ''Silence cannot hide anything — which is more than you can say for words.'' — From the play ''The Ghost Sonata'' by Swedish author-playwright August Strindberg (born 1849, died this date in 1912). RUBES® In 1998, singer-actor Frank Sinatra died at a Los Angeles hospital at age 82. The hit sitcom ''Seinfeld'' aired its final episode after nine years on NBC. Ten years ago: NATO and Russia reached a historic agree- ment in Reykjavik, Iceland, to combat common security threats in the post-Sept. 11 era. Former President Jimmy Carter addressed Cuba in an unprecedented hour of live, uncensored television, telling Cubans that their country did not meet international standards of democracy. Five years ago: DaimlerChrysler said it was selling almost all of Chrysler to private equity firm Cerberus Capital Man- agement for $7.4 billion, backing out of a troubled 1998 takeover. By Leigh Rubin ZITS BY JERRY SCOTT & JIM BORGMAN FRANK & ERNEST® By Bob Thaves ALLEY OOP

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