The Pacific swift (Apus pacificus) is a bird that breeds in eastern Asia. This
swift is strongly
migratory, spending the northern hemisphere's winter in a wide range of habitats in
Southeast Asia and Australia. The general shape and blackish plumage recall its relative, the
common swift, from which it is distinguished by a white rump band and heavily marked underparts. Its main call is a screech typical of its
family. It breeds in sheltered locations such as caves and rock crevices, or under the eaves of houses. The nest is a half-cup of dry grass and other fine material that is gathered in flight, cemented with saliva and attached to a vertical surface. Two or three white eggs are incubated for about seventeen days before hatching. Like all swifts, the Pacific swift feeds exclusively on insects caught in flight. The species has a large population that occurs as far afield as the US and New Zealand, and rarely in Europe. (Full article...)
... that the 16-piece Detroit News Orchestra was the first symphonic orchestra in the world organized specifically to play on radio?
... that the
Fatimid military commander Dirgham abandoned his pupil
Ruzzik ibn Tala'i, the
vizier, to be deposed and killed by
Shawar, only to overthrow the latter a few months later?
Rosa Parks (February 4, 1913 – October 24, 2005) was an American activist in the
civil rights movement, best known for her pivotal role in the
Montgomery bus boycott. On December 1, 1955, in
Montgomery, Alabama, Parks rejected a bus driver's order to relinquish her seat in the "colored section" to a white passenger after the whites-only section was filled, inspiring the African-American community to boycott the Montgomery buses for more than a year. Her act of defiance and the boycott became important symbols of the civil rights movement and resistance to
racial segregation. After her conviction for disorderly conduct, her appeal became bogged down in the state courts, but the federal Montgomery bus lawsuit, Browder v. Gayle, succeeded in overturning bus segregation in November 1956. Upon her death, Parks became the first woman to
lie in honor in the
U.S. Capitol rotunda.
California and
Missouri commemorate
Rosa Parks Day on the anniversary of her birth.
This photograph of Parks being fingerprinted was taken on February 22, 1956, when she was arrested again, along with 73 others, after a grand jury indicted 113 African Americans for organizing the Montgomery bus boycott.
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