Friday, February 28, 2014

What Happened This Day In History

February 28
1066 Westminster Abbey, the most famous church in England, opens its doors.
1574 On the orders of the Holy Office of the Inquisition, two Englishmen and an Irishman are burnt for heresy.
1610 Thomas West is appointed governor of Virginia.
1704 Indians attack Deerfield, Mass. killing 40 and kidnapping 100.
1847 Colonel Alexander Doniphan and his ragtag Missouri Mounted Volunteers ride to victory at the Battle of Sacramento, during the Mexican War.
1861 The territory of Colorado is established.
1900 After a 119-day siege by the Boers, the surrounded British troops in Ladysmith, South Africa, are relieved.
1863 Four Union gunboats destroy the CSS Nashville near Fort McAllister, Georgia.
1916 Haiti becomes the first U.S. protectorate.
1924 U.S. troops are sent to Honduras to protect American interests during an election conflict.
1936 The Japanese Army restores order in Tokyo and arrests officers involved in a coup.
1945 U.S. tanks break the natural defense line west of the Rhine and cross the Erft River.
1946 The U.S. Army declares that it will use V-2 rocket to test radar as an atomic rocket defense system.
1953 Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia sign a 5-year defense pact in Ankara.
1967 In Mississippi, 19 are indicted in the slayings of three civil rights workers.
1969 A Los Angeles court refuses Robert Kennedy assassin Sirhan Sirhan's request to be executed.
1971 The male electorate in Lichtenstein refuses to give voting rights to women.
1994 U.S. warplanes shoot down four Serb aircraft over Bosnia in the first NATO use of force in the troubled area.
Born on February 28
1533 Michel de Montaigne, French moralist who created the personal essay.
1820 John Tenniel, illustrator of various books (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland).
1824 Charles Blondin, tightrope walker.
1894 Ben Hecht, writer.
1901 Linus Pauling, Nobel Prize-winning American chemist.
1909 Stephen Spender, English poet, critic.
1911 Denis Burkitt, British medical researcher.
1926 Svetlana Stalin, daughter of Josef Stalin.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Today In History. What Happened This Day In History

A chronological timetable of historical events that occurred on this day in history. Historical facts of the day in the areas of military, politics, science, music, sports, arts, entertainment and more. Discover what happened today in history.

February 26
364On the death of Jovian, a conference at Nicaea chooses Valentinan, an army officer who was born in the central European region of Pannania, to succeed him in Asia Minor.
1154William the Bad succeeds his father, Roger the II, in Sicily.
1790As a result of the Revolution, France is divided into 83 departments.
1815Napoleon and 1,200 of his men leave Elba to start the 100-day re-conquest of France.
1848Karl Marx and Frederick Engels publish The Communist Manifesto in London.
1871France and Prussia sign a preliminary peace treaty at Versailles.
1901Boxer Rebellion leaders Chi-Hsin and Hsu-Cheng-Yu are publicly executed in Peking.
1914Russian aviator Igor Sikorsky carries 17 passengers in a twin engine plane in St. Petersburg.
1916General Henri Philippe Petain takes command of the French forces at Verdun.
1917President Wilson publicly asks congress for the power to arm merchant ships.
1924U.S. steel industry finds claims an eight-hour day increases efficiency and employee relations.
1933Ground is broken for the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.
1936Japanese military troops march into Tokyo to conduct a coup and assassinate political leaders.
1941British take the Somali capital in East Africa.
1943U.S. Flying Fortresses and Liberators pound German docks and U-boat lairs at Wilhelmshaven.
1945Syria declares war on Germany and Japan.
1951The 22nd Amendment is added to the Constitution limiting the Presidency to two terms.
1964Lyndon B. Johnson signs a tax bill with $11.5 billion in cuts.
1965Norman Butler is arrested for the murder of Malcom X.
1968Thirty-two African nations agree to boycott the Olympics because of the presence of South Africa.
1970Five Marines are arrested on charges of murdering 11 South Vietnamese women and children.
1972Soviets recover Luna 20 with a cargo of moon rocks.
1973A publisher and 10 reporters are subpoenaed to testify on Watergate.
1990Daniel Ortega, communist president of Nicaragua, suffers a shocking election defeat at the hands of Violeta Chamorro.
1993A bomb rocks the World Trade Center in New York City. Five people are killed and hundreds suffer from smoke inhalation.
Born on February 26
1802Victor Hugo, French novelist and poet (Les Misérables).
1829Levi Strauss, creator of blue jeans.
1832John George Nicolay, private secretary to Abraham Lincoln
1846William Frederick Cody, aka "Buffalo Bill".
1877Rudolph Dirks, cartoonist, creator of the "Katzenjammer Kids."
1879Mabel Dodge Luhan, American biographer.
1893I(vor) A(rmstrong) Richards, writer, critic and teacher.
1928Antoine "Fats" Domino, American singer.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Strange Sleep Disorder Makes People See 'Demons'


By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior WriterApril 1, 2013 11:29 AM
When filmmaker Carla MacKinnon started waking up several times a week unable to move, with the sense that a disturbing presence was in the room with her, she didn't call up her local ghost hunter. She got researching.
Now, that research is becoming a short film and multiplatform art project exploring the strange and spooky phenomenon of sleep paralysis. The film, supported by the Wellcome Trust and set to screen at the Royal College of Arts in London, will debut in May.
Sleep paralysis happens when people become conscious while their muscles remain in the ultra-relaxed state that prevents them from acting out their dreams. The experience can be quite terrifying, with many people hallucinating a malevolent presence nearby, or even an attacker suffocating them. Surveys put the number of sleep paralysis sufferers between about 5 percent and 60 percent of the population.
"I was getting quite a lot of sleep paralysis over the summer, quite frequently, and I became quite interested in what was happening, what medically or scientifically, it was all about," MacKinnon said. [Top 10 Spooky Sleep Disorders]
Her questions led her to talk with psychologists and scientists, as well as to people who experience the phenomenon. Myths and legends about sleep paralysis persist all over the globe, from the incubus and succubus (male and female demons, respectively) of European tales to a pink dolphin-turned-nighttime seducer in Brazil. Some of the stories MacKinnon uncovered reveal why these myths are so chilling.
Sleep stories
One man told her about his frequent sleep paralysis episodes, during which he'd experience extremely realistic hallucinations of a young child, skipping around the bed and singing nursery rhymes. Sometimes, the child would sit on his pillow and talk to him. One night, the tot asked the man a personal question. When he refused to answer, the child transformed into a "horrendous demon," MacKinnon said.
For another man, who had the sleep disorder narcolepsy (which can make sleep paralysis more common), his dream world clashed with the real world in a horrifying way. His sleep paralysis episodes typically included hallucinations that someone else was in his house or his room — he'd hear voices or banging around. One night, he awoke in a paralyzed state and saw a figure in his room as usual. [See MacKinnon's Artistic Images of Sleep Paralysis]
"He suddenly realizes something is different," MacKinnon said. "He suddenly realizes that he is in sleep paralysis, and his eyes are open, but the person who is in the room is in his room in real life."
The figure was no dream demon, but an actual burglar.
Myths and science of sleep paralysis
Sleep paralysis experiences are almost certainly behind the myths of the incubus and succubus, demons thought have sex with unsuspecting humans in their sleep. In many cases, MacKinnon said, the science of sleep paralysis explains these myths. The feeling of suffocating or someone pushing down on the chest that often occurs during sleep paralysis may be a result of the automatic breathing pattern people fall into during sleep. When they become conscious while still in this breathing pattern, people may try to bring their breathing under voluntary control, leading to the feeling of suffocating.
Add to that the hallucinations that seem to seep in from the dream world, and it's no surprise that interpretations lend themselves to demons, ghosts or even alien abduction, MacKinnon said.
What's more, MacKinnon said, sleep paralysis is more likely when your sleep is disrupted in some way — perhaps because you've been traveling, you're too hot or too cold, or you're sleeping in an unfamiliar or spooky place. Those tendencies may make it more likely that a person will experience sleep paralysis when already vulnerable to thoughts of ghosts and ghouls. 
"It's interesting seeing how these scientific narratives and the more psychoanalytical or psychological narratives can support each other rather than conflict," MacKinnon said.
Since working on the project, MacKinnon has been able to bring her own sleep paralysis episodes under control — or at least learned to calm herself during them. The trick, she said, is to use episodes like a form of research, by paying attention to details like how her hands feel and what position she's in. This sort of mindfulness tends to make scary hallucinations blink away, she said. 
"Rationalizing it is incredibly counterintuitive," she said. "It took me a really long time to stop believing that it was real, because it feels so incredibly real."

What Happened This Day In History

February 13

167 Polycarp, a disciple of St. John and bishop of Smyrna, is martyred on the west coast of Asia Minor.

1542 Catherine Howard, the fifth wife of Henry VIII, is beheaded for adultery.

1689 British Parliament adopts the Bill of Rights.

1692 In the Glen Coe highlands of Scotland, thirty-eight members of the MacDonald clan are murdered by soldiers of the neighboring Campbell clan for not pledging allegiance to William of Orange. Ironically the pledge had been made but not communicated to the clans. The event is remembered as the Massacre of Glencoe.

1862 The four day Battle of Fort Donelson, Tennessee, begins.

1865 The Confederacy approves the recruitment of slaves as soldiers, as long as the approval of their owners is gained.

1866 Jesse James holds up his first bank.

1914 The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) is founded.

1936 First social security checks are put in the mail.

1945 The Royal Air Force Bomber Command devastates the German city of Dresden with night raids by 873 heavy bombers. The attacks are joined by 521 American heavy bombers flying daylight raids.

1949 A mob burns a radio station in Ecuador after the broadcast of H.G. Wells' "War of the Worlds."

1951 At the Battle of Chipyong-ni, in Korea, U.N. troops contain the Chinese forces' offensive in a two-day battle.

1953 The Pope asks the United States to grant clemency to convicted spies Ethel and Julius Rosenberg.

1968 The United States sends 10,500 more combat troops to Vietnam.

1970 General Motors is reportedly redesigning automobiles to run on unleaded fuel.

1972 Enemy attacks in Vietnam decline for the third day as the United States continues its intensive bombing strategy.

1984 Konstantin Chernenko is selected to succeed Yuri Andropov as Party General Secretary in the Soviet Union.