Telephone
inventor Alexander Graham Bell related to his father in a letter dated March
10, 1876, that “articulate speech was transmitted intelligibly this afternoon”
from a “transmitter instrument” in one room to a “receiving instrument in another room.” Bell Telephone Company introduced the battery-transmitting
telephone two decades later, on December 20, 1898.
Ñañíguismo, the Abakuá
An initiatory
society tracing its pre-colonial origins to present-day southeastern Nigeria,
the Abakuá have contributed an immense non-verbal and kinematic vocabulary to
popular modes of gestural expression in Cuba and throughout the Americas.
Heron of Alexandria and Heron's Windmill
Greek inventor and geometer Heron of Alexandria described a
menagerie of mechanical devices, air- and hydraulic-operated machines—and explored the utilization of steam as a motive power in the book(s) Pneumatica. Heron’s work re-appeared in translation, in 1899, when German engineer Wilhelm Schmidt published the now standard text Herons von Alexandria Druckwerke und Automatentheater : Pneumaticaet Automata.
Martin Luther King Jr. and "Beyond Vietnam"
Historian, professional bibliophile, and Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America member
Frank Xavier Deodene recounts a conversation in April 1967 with
philanthropist and civil rights movement supporter Lawrence MacGregor, a former president of the Summit Trust Company.
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