// JavaScript Document
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var msg = new Array();
Stamp = new Date();
today = Stamp.getDate();

msg[1] = "<b>November 1, 1968:</b>  The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) is founded by Marjorie Talalay and Nina Sundell as &#8220;Cleveland's forum for interpreting culture through contemporary visual art.&#8221;";

msg[2] = "<b>November 2, 1912:</b> <a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=exact&amp;CISOFIELD1=subjec&amp;CISOROOT=all&amp;CISOBOX1=West+Side+Market>The West Side Market</a>, Cleveland's oldest publicly owned market, opens in its new bigger market house designed by Hubbell and Benes.";

msg[3] = "<b>November 3, 1975:</b> A Shaker Heights Municipal Court judge fines two nuns and four other women $100 and puts them on probation for actions in support of the United Farm Workers. The judge states that even passive civil disobedience could lead to violence. The women are convicted of criminal trespass at a supermarket where they had tried to persuade shoppers not to buy California grapes and lettuce and had refused to leave the store. The UFW sought fair employment practices for its members.  (P.D.)";

msg[4] = "<b>November 4, 1975:</b>  Election day and Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk easily wins his third term, defeating challenger Arnold R. Pinkney. Councilman Dennis J. Kucinich is elected clerk of municipal court, positioning him to run for mayor in two years.";

msg[5] = "<b>November 5, 1997:</b> Starbucks has finally made its long-awaited entrance into the Cleveland coffee scene. Three of the ubiquitous coffeehouse chain's locations open in the Cleveland area to mixed reviews; one downtown at Key Tower, another on Cedar Rd. in Cleveland Heights, and a third on W. Market St. in Fairlawn.";

msg[6] = "<b>November 6, 1995:</b> It is a sad day for football fans in Cleveland as Art Model announces that he is moving the Cleveland Browns to Baltimore.";

msg[7] = "<b>November 7, 1851:</b> The &#8220;Swedish nightingale&#8221;, Jenny Lind performs before a crowd of 1,125 at Kelly's Hall.";

msg[8] = "<b>November 8, 1976:</b>  American Municipal Power-Ohio, which represents more than 80 publicly owned electric utilities around the state, is interested in buying the Cleveland Municipal Light Plant. In a letter to city officials, AMP-O asks that a proposed sale of Muny Light to the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. be held in abeyance so a competing offer could be made. But there is no sale. Muny Light, now Cleveland Public Power, remains city-owned. (P.D.)";

msg[9] = "<b>November 9, 1993:</b> Browns players and Cleveland fans are stunned, angry and sad over the release of quarterback Bernie Kosar yesterday by Browns coach Bill Belichick, ending Kosar's eight-year career with the team. ";

msg[10] = "<b>November 10, 1937:</b> <a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/u?/postcards,2758>Cleveland Arena</a>, located at 3717 Euclid Ave., opens with a production of the Ice Follies of 1938. Devoted to sporting events, the Arena was home ice for the Cleveland Barons hockey team, but was also the site of the Moondog Coronation Ball, the first rock'n'roll concert in 1952. After the construction of the Richfield Coliseum in 1974, the Arena no longer hosted major events and was demolished in 1977.";

msg[11] = "<b>November 11, 1864:</b> George W. Crile, surgeon, researcher, and a founder of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, is born in Chili, Ohio. He is reputed to have performed the first successful human blood transfusion at St. Alexis Hospital Medical Center in 1906.";

msg[12] = "<b>November 12, 1977:</b> Cleveland's Mayor-elect Dennis J. Kucinich announces his Cabinet would be a mix of a youthful corps of loyal political mavericks and outspoken government professionals. The Cabinet would contain four blacks, a woman, several ethnics and three holdovers from the administration of Mayor Ralph J. Perk. Several officials would date back to the administration of Mayor Carl B. Stokes in the late 1960s. (P.D.)";

msg[13] = "<b>November 13, 1940:</b> The Cleveland Health Education Museum (now HealthSpace Cleveland) officially opens its doors as the first permanent health museum in the country. Its purpose was to portray the advances made in medical and health science and to promote personal and community hygiene.";

msg[14] = "<b>November 14, 1946:</b> The Cleveland Recording Company, Cleveland's first professional recording studio and one of the longest operating independent recording studios in the United States, is incorporated by radio announcer, Frederick Wolf.";

msg[15] = "<b>November 15, 1991:</b> The 48-foot, 45 ton sculpture, <em><a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/u?/postcards,2641>Free Stamp</a></em> by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen is inaugurated in Willard Park.";

msg[16] = "<b>November 16, 1895:</b> The Cedar-Jennings streetcar falls from the <a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/u?/general,186>Central Viaduct</a> into the river, killing 17 people. ";

msg[17] = "<b>November 17, 1919:</b> Two pickets are shot outside American Steel and Wire by machine gun fire from inside the plant when they tried to prevent steel workers from entering the plant during the 1919 steel strike.";

msg[18] = "<b>November 18, 1931:</b> The East Cleveland Congregational Church is established from the merger of the East Congregational Church and the Mayflower Church Congregational with Rev. Howard Lee Torbet as their first pastor.";

msg[19] = "<b>November 19, 1976:</b> A federal jury awards the city of Cleveland $350,000 in a lawsuit that holds Peter Kiewit and Sons Inc., an Omaha, Nebraska construction firm, responsible for the collapse of a 120-foot section of Dock 34, between the Stadium and the E. 9th St. Pier.  (P.D.)";

msg[20] = "<b>November 20, 1977:</b> Judge Paul C. Weick of the U.S. Court of Appeals 6th Circuit tells U.S. District Judge Frank J. Battisti not to interfere with the Ohio Supreme Court's jurisdiction over school financial problems. A day earlier Battisti had told the school board and the county auditor to ignore the Supreme Court's decision requiring the school district to begin repaying $15 million in bank loans. (P.D.)";

msg[21] = "<b>November 21, 1936:</b> The 37th annual Cleveland auto show breaks an opening day record as 17,629 view the new models at Public Hall.";

msg[22] = "<b>November 22, 1923:</b> Ernie Anderson, also known to Clevelanders as the late night horror-movie host, <a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/u?/press,389>Ghoulardi</a>, is born in Lynn, Mass.";

msg[23] = "<b>November 23, 1956:</b> The foundations of Cleveland Arena are rocked as Elvis Presley performs two shows in front of thousands of screaming teenage fans.";

msg[24] = "<b>November 24, 1869:</b> The American Women's Suffragette Association convention is held at Case Hall in Cleveland. Formed as a less radical alternative to the National Woman Suffrage Association, the delegates representing 21 states included such luminaries as Susan B. Anthony, the Reverend Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, and an early Cleveland feminist activist, Caroline Severence. ";

msg[25] = "<b>November 25, 1991:</b> Station officials  at WLTF-FM/106.5 get more reaction than they bargain for when they run promotions for the &#8220;Turkeys From Heaven&#8221; stunt, promising to drop &#8220;Wake-Up Club&#8221; turkeys on homes. The station is flooded with calls from angry people who believe the station intends to drop live turkeys on homes from 1,000 feet. ";

msg[26] = "<b>November 26, 1996:</b> Cleveland civic leader, businesswoman, and philanthropist Ruth Ratner Miller dies at the age of 71. President of Tower City center from 1982 until her death, she was responsible for rebuilding and renovating it, turning its lower levels into a glamorous shopping center. ";

msg[27] = "<b>November 27, 1950:</b> Cleveland suffers under high winds and heavy snow as day three of a freak blizzard that began Thanksgiving day paralyzes the city, making it necessary for Mayor Thomas Burke to call in the National Guard to help remove the 22.1 inches of snow.";

msg[28] = "<b>November 28, 1975:</b> Jurors deliberate six hours before finding William Kiraly, 55, guilty of aggravated arson and attempted aggravated murder in the bombing of the office-home of rackets figure Danny Greene. (P.D.)";

msg[29] = "<b>November 29, 1956:</b> An 150,000 people from a dozen states are estimated to see the <a href=http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=all&amp;CISOBOX1=Christmas%20Tree%20department%20store&amp;CISOFIELD1=CISOSEARCHALL&amp;CISOOP2=exact&amp;CISOBOX2=&amp;CISOFIELD2=CISOSEARCHALL&amp;CISOOP3=any&amp;CISOBOX3=&amp;CISOFIELD3=CISOSEARCHALL&amp;CISOOP4=none&amp;CISOBOX4=&amp;CISOFIELD4=CISOSEARCHALL&amp;CISOROOT=/press&amp;t=a>Sterling Linder Davis Christmas tree</a>, which is billed as the nation's tallest indoor tree.";

msg[30] = "<b>November 30, 1967:</b> Cleveland Clinic's first coronary by-pass operation is successfully performed by Argentine surgeon, Dr. Rene G. Favaloro. Find out more about <a href=http://www.clevelandmemory.org/cardiac/index.html>Cleveland as a pioneer in cardiac care</a>.";


/*msg[27] = "<strong>October 27, 1923:</strong>  Award-winning actress Ruby Dee is born in Cleveland. Born Ruby Ann Wallace, she appeared in over fifty films and was nominated twice for Academy Awards. She and her husband, Ossie Davis, were jointly awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1995, and are both inductees in the Theater Hall of Fame and the NAACP Hall of Fame.";

msg[28] = "<strong>October 28, 1975:</strong> For the first time in nearly four years, an Amtrak train pulls into Cleveland. About 500 people welcome the Lake Shore Limited as it pulls into the lakefront station to mark the resumption of full-time train service to the city. Amtrak service had been discontinued in early 1972 because of low interest. Cleveland had been the only major U.S. city without passenger train service. (P.D.)";

msg[29] = "<strong>October 29, 1942:</strong> Poet, publisher, and painter d.a. levy (Darryl Allen Levy) is born on the near west side of Cleveland. A fighter for free expression and against social injustice and repression, Levy brought the counterculture to Cleveland during the 1960s. <a href=http://www.clevelandmemory.org/levy>Find out more about d.a. levy</a>. ";

msg[30] = "<strong>October 30, 1995:</strong> Thousands of Cleveland baseball fans drop whatever they normally do on a Monday to make a pilgrimage to Public Square for one last hurrah for the 1995 Indians. The Indians won the American League pennant, but fell to the Atlanta Braves 4 games to 2 during the World Series.";

msg[31] = "<strong>October 31, 1948:</strong> Operating from the NBC Bldg. on Superior Ave. at E. 9th St., WBNK TV channel 4 begins broadcasting in Cleveland with an NBC network show, &#8220;Television Playhouse&#8221;. ";*/


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