Daily Calendar for Saturday, March 11, 2028

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Saturday, March 11, 2028

Ember Days happen four times a year at the start of each season. Traditionally observed by some Christian denominations, each set of Ember Days is three days, kept on a successive Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 

These three days are set apart for fasting, abstinence, and prayer. The first of these four times comes in winter, after the Feast of St. Lucia, December 13; the second set comes with the First Sunday in Lent; the third set comes after Whitsunday/Pentecost Sunday; the four and last set comes after the Feast of the Holy Cross. Their dates can be remembered by this old mnemonic:

“Sant Crux, Lucia, Cineres, Charismata Dia Ut sit in angaria quarta sequens feria.”

Which means:

“Holy Cross, Lucy, Ash Wednesday, Pentecost, are when the quarter holidays follow.”

In Latin, Ember Days are known as the quattuor anni tempora (the “four seasons of the year”). Folklore has it that the weather on each of the three days foretells the weather for three successive months. 

As with much folklore, this is grounded in some common sense since the beginning of the four seasons cue the changes in weather as well as a shift in how we keep harmony with the Earth and respect our stewardship of the Earth, our “garden of Eden.”“

Purim begins at sundown and concludes at nightfall the next day. One of the merriest days of the Jewish year is the early-spring holiday of Purim, celebrated on the 14th day of the month of Adar. It commemorates the deliverance of the Jews from the massacre plotted by Haman, the chief minister of King Ahasuerus of Persia. The source of the holiday is the biblical Book of Esther, which is read during special Purim services that are marked by great revelry. Each time Haman’s name is read, congregants drown it out by making as much noise as possible—whistling, catcalling, hissing, booing, stomping, or using groggers (special Purim noisemakers). One of the traditional foods of this celebration is hamantaschen, a three-cornered filled pastry supposed to represent Haman’s hat.

Born

  • Robert Treat Paine (public official)
  • Urbain Le Verrier (astronomer)
  • Thomas Hastings (co-architect of N.Y. Public Library)
  • Vannevar Bush (electrical engineer)
  • Henry Dixon Cowell (composer)
  • Dorothy Gish (actress)
  • Lawrence Welk (bandleader)
  • Mercer Ellington (musician)
  • Ralph Abernathy (civil rights leader)
  • Sam Donaldson (broadcast journalist)
  • Antonin Scalia (Supreme Court justice)
  • Douglas Noel Adams (author)
  • Lisa Loeb (musician)
  • Terrence Howard (actor)
  • Joel & Benji Madden (musicians)
  • Thora Birch (actress)

Died

  • Oscar Mayer (manufacturer)
  • Philo T. Farnsworth (inventor)
  • James Tobin (Yale economist and Nobel Prize winner)
  • Frank Neuhauser (in 1925 won the first U.S. national spelling bee with the word gladiolus”“)

Events

  • A deadly Mt. Etna eruption began in Italy
  • The Bureau of Indian Affairs was created in the U.S. War Department
  • Jennie Kidd Trout became the first Canadian woman to become licensed to practice medicine, earning her degree on this day from the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania. Later in 1875, she passed the exams of the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Ontario, thereby becoming the first woman licensed to practice medicine in Canada.
  • First public game of basketball played, Springfield, Massachusetts
  • The Bank of Canada opened as a privately owned and government-controlled corporation
  • Congress maintained U.S. neutrality in the war in Europe but passed the Lend-Lease Act, which enabled England to borrow aircraft, weapons, and merchant ships
  • Naval Unit Commendation awarded to light cruiser U.S.S. Helena
  • Lorraine Hansberry’s play, A Raisin in the Sun, opened in New York. It was the first play by an African American woman to appear on Broadway
  • Lorraine Hansbury’s A Raisin in the Sun becomes the first play written by a black woman (and first with a black director) to open on Broadway.
  • Space probe Pioneer 5 was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida
  • Florida panther was added to the endangered species list
  • Levi Strauss began selling bell-bottom jeans
  • U.S. Senator Harrison Williams resigned his Senate seat as a result of being charged with misconduct
  • Mikhail Gorbachev was chosen to succeed Chernenko as general secretary of the Soviet Communist Party
  • Former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress during Iran-Contra affair
  • Andrew Rotz made 11,123 consecutive Texas skips in 3 hours, 10 minutes in Las Vegas, Nevada
  • A magnitude-9.0 earthquake devastated Japan and spawned a 23-foot tsunami. The quake moved Honshu, Japan, 8 feet to the east.
  • Great white shark circled fisherman’s kayak for over one hour near Maui, Hawaii
  • After a stray cow in Pembroke Pines, Florida, could not be caught by police or assisting cow herders for weeks, police put up a notice on Twitter asking the public for help in locating the animal. The cow was described as Faster than it looks; talented fence jumper; enjoys pools. (The animal was eventually found.)
  • The World Health Organization declared COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic,

Weather

  • Great Blizzard of ‘88 started, East Coast — 400 died, 200 ships sank or were heavily damaged, and up to 40 inches of snow fell
  • Record U.S. snowdepth at Tamarack, California, 451 inches