Date | Text | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
100 years anniversary | ||||
31 Dec 1925 | 14th Congress of CPSU decides to accelerate industry | |||
31 Dec 1925 | 14th congress of CPSU decides to accelerate industry | |||
75 years anniversary | ||||
31 Dec 1950 | Inge Helten: German FR, sprinter (1976 Olympics - Bronze Medalist) | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Robert Bryan Gilder: Corvallis, Oregon -- PGA golfer (1980 Canadian Open) | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Charles Koechlin: French Composer (Jungle Book), dies at 83 | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Karl Renner: Austrian Chancellor / President (1918-20, 45-50), dies at 80 | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Jockeys W Shoemaker and Joe Culmone set record of 388 wins in a year | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Inge Helten German Federal Republic, sprinter (Olympics-bronze-1976) | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Robert Bryan Gilder Corvallis OR, PGA golfer (1980 Canadian Open) | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Charles Koechlin French composer (Jungle Book), dies at 83 | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Karl Renner Austrian Chancellor/President (1918-20, 45-50), dies at 80 | |||
31 Dec 1950 | Jockeys Willie Shoemaker & Joe Culmone set record of 388 wins in a year | |||
50 years anniversary | ||||
31 Dec 1975 | Donal Michalsky: Composer, dies at 47 | |||
31 Dec 1975 | 42nd Sugar Bowl: Alabama 13 beats Penn State 6 | |||
31 Dec 1975 | Cole Ford kicker (Oakland Raiders) | |||
31 Dec 1975 | Donal Michalsky composer, dies at 47 | |||
31 Dec 1975 | 42nd Sugar Bowl: Alabama 13 beats Penn State 6 | |||
25 years anniversary | ||||
31 Dec 2000 |
death Kenneth L. Pike Died 31 Dec 2000 at age 88 (born 9 Jun 1912). Kenneth Lee Pike was an American linguist and anthropologist who was known for his studies of the aboriginal languages of Mexico, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, New Guinea, Java, Ghana, Nigeria, Australia, Nepal, and the Philippines. He was also the originator of tagmemics which extends to the analysis of grammar and behavior the concepts used in phonology so as to view all elements as part of a system. He distinguished between the concept of emic and etic, terms he coined in 1954. Etic refers to a trained observer's perception of the uninterpreted “raw” data. Emic refers to how that data is interpreted by an “insider” to the system. |